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Anthropic Launches Institute to Study Risks and Economic Effects of Advanced AI

Anthropic said on Wednesday it is launching the Anthropic Institute, a new unit focused on studying the social, economic, and legal challenges that could emerge as more powerful artificial intelligence systems are developed.

The company said in a blog post that the institute will draw on research from across Anthropic and publish information that outside researchers and the public can use as AI systems become more capable.

Anthropic said the move reflects its view that AI progress is accelerating and that more dramatic advances could arrive within the next two years. In the post, the company said its models already can identify severe cybersecurity vulnerabilities, perform a range of real-world tasks, and begin to speed up AI development itself.

According to Anthropic, the institute will examine questions such as how powerful AI systems could affect jobs and economic activity, what risks they could create or amplify, how companies should determine the values reflected in AI systems, and how increasingly capable systems should be governed if recursive self-improvement begins.

The institute will be led by Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark, who is taking on a new role as the company’s head of public benefit. Anthropic said the unit will bring together and expand three existing research groups: Frontier Red Team, which tests the limits of current AI systems; Societal Impacts, which studies how AI is being used in the real world; and Economic Research, which tracks effects on jobs and the broader economy.

Anthropic also said the institute is working on new efforts to forecast AI progress and study how powerful AI systems could interact with the legal system.

The institute would have access to information available to builders of frontier AI systems, the company said, and would report candidly on what it learns. Anthropic said the institute would engage with workers, industries, and communities that may face disruption, and that those discussions would help shape both the institute’s research and the company’s broader actions.

The institute’s founding hires include Matt Botvinick, a resident fellow at Yale Law School and former senior director of research at Google DeepMind, who will lead work on AI and the rule of law. Anton Korinek, on leave from his role as a professor of economics at the University of Virginia, will join the institute's economics research team to study how advanced AI could reshape economic activity. Zoë Hitzig, who previously studied AI’s social and economic impacts at OpenAI, will join to connect the company’s economics work to model training and development.

About the Author

John K. Waters is the editor in chief of a number of Converge360.com sites, with a focus on high-end development, AI and future tech. He's been writing about cutting-edge technologies and culture of Silicon Valley for more than two decades, and he's written more than a dozen books. He also co-scripted the documentary film Silicon Valley: A 100 Year Renaissance, which aired on PBS.  He can be reached at [email protected].

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