Anthropic, an Artificial Intelligence company, has called for a coordinated global mechanism that would allow leading AI developers to slow down or temporarily pause the development of advanced AI systems if risks begin to outpace society’s ability to manage them.

 

The San Francisco-based company, known for its Claude family of AI models, warned that the rapid advancement of frontier AI could eventually lead to systems capable of improving themselves with limited human oversight.

Anthropic said such developments could arrive sooner than many governments, institutions, and regulators are prepared for, Reuters reported.

In a recent report and accompanying policy proposal, Anthropic argued that the world should have the option to temporarily slow AI progress to allow safety research, governance frameworks, and societal institutions to keep pace with technological advances.

The company stressed that any pause would need to be coordinated internationally, as unilateral action by a single company would likely prove ineffective if competitors continued developing increasingly powerful systems.

Anthropic’s proposal includes the creation of a globally verifiable framework that could monitor compliance among major AI developers, drawing comparisons to international agreements used in areas such as nuclear governance.

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The company said its newly launched research initiatives will focus on studying the economic, social, and security implications of advanced AI systems.

The warning comes at a time when AI capabilities are increasing across the industry.

Anthropic revealed that AI tools are already playing a significant role in software development within the company, which highlights that advanced systems are contributing to the creation of new technologies.

Anthropic believes governments, researchers, and technology firms must work together to establish safety mechanisms before AI capabilities advance beyond existing oversight structures.

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Folake Balogun is a technology journalist covering the evolving digital economy, with a focus on startup ecosystems, fintech innovation, artificial Intelligence, venture capital, and emerging technologies. Her work explores the intersection of technology, business, and society by highlighting how innovations such as artificial intelligence and next-generation connectivity are shaping everyday life and economic growth across the African continent and globally. She is a sixth cohort participant in the Technology and Digital Reporting training hosted by the Media Career Development Network in partnership with the U.S. Consulate General, Lagos. Folake is also a Fellow of the Tax Justice and Equity Project (2023 Cohort) by the International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR) with the support of the International Budget Partnership. Through her reporting and analysis, she continues to spotlight the people, ideas, and technologies driving digital transformation.

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