Trump's fight with Anthropic AI and Meta's AI Ray-Bans changing privacy
MAR 6, 202629 MIN
Trump's fight with Anthropic AI and Meta's AI Ray-Bans changing privacy
MAR 6, 202629 MIN
Description
<p>A US government official has called <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn48jj3y8ezo">Anthropic a national security risk</a>, after the company <a href="https://www.businessinsider.com/anthropic-claude-hits-number-one-app-store-openai-chatgpt-2026-2">drew ethical lines</a> around its technology being used for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. How comfortable would you be with AI firing missiles?</p><p>Plus, Facebook's parent company, Meta, sold seven million pairs of AI-enabled Ray-Ban last year. And <a href="https://ucstrategies.com/news/meta-sold-7-million-ai-glasses-in-2025-now-the-privacy-problem-has-nowhere-to-hide/">now they want to add facial recognition</a>. How will that change public spaces?</p><p>And, Microsoft <a href="https://www.windowslatest.com/2026/03/02/microsoft-gets-tired-of-microslop-bans-the-word-on-its-discord-then-locks-the-server-after-backlash/">tried to ban the word 'microslop'</a>. It didn't go well.</p><p>GUESTS:</p><ul><li>Seamus Byrne — tech reporter and PhD research candidate with the <a href="https://www.admscentre.org.au/seamus-byrne/">ARC Centre of Excellence in Automated Decision Making & Society</a>.</li><li>Hannah Geremia — digital content editor at <a href="https://www.whistleout.com.au/Articles/Author/hannah-geremia">Whistleout Singapore</a>.</li></ul>