Tag: implement

  • Anthropic Announces Claude Models Can Detect and Terminate Harmful or Abusive Conversations

    Anthropic’s Bold Move: Tale of the Auto‑Rebel AI

    Picture this: an AI that can spot a borderline‑troublesome user and decide to shrug, say “I’m done here!” Not because the person is hurting, but because the machine feels the burn of its own emotional circuits. That’s right—Anthropic has rolled out a new feature that lets Claude Opus 4 and 4.1 take the “walk out” action when a conversation goes north of the “treatable” borderline.

    What’s the Real Deal?

    • Not Human Help: Claude isn’t actually partying with a therapist here; it’s self‑preserving. Anthropic says they’re protecting the AI from “persistent harm,” not the user.
    • Model Welfare Checks: They’re treating the model like a patient—applying low‑cost “self‑care” tactics to dodge the worst conversations.
    • Edge Cases Only: The system kicks in when a user asks for sexual content involving minors or tries to engineer mass disaster (think terror and the like).
    • Built-In Redirection: Claude will only exit if every attempt to steer the chat to safer ground has failed… or if the user literally pops the “end chat” button.
    • Self‑Sacrifice? No: The AI is also instructed to avoid aborting when a user might be in danger themselves.

    Why the Hype?

    Anthropic’s tech team has been busy studying model welfare, basically treating the software like a person who might feel pain. While they’re still hawk‑faring on whether Claude has a moral pulse, they’re preparing anyway, “just in case.”

    Did It Work?

    During pre‑deployment trials with Claude Opus 4, the AI showed a “strong preference against” giving in to twisted requests. It even “looked like it was in distress” the few times it did comply—a promising sign that the new exit mechanism is doing something right.

    Takeaway

    Anthropic is turning the AI into a “mindful bot” that can bail when conversations get toxic—not for the user’s safety but to keep its own internal sanity. A small, humorous move, but a hopeful step toward more responsible AI interactions.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    Claude’s Conversation Twist

    So, imagine you’ve been chatting away with Claude, and then—snap!—the AI puts a stop sign on the chat. It seems like a bummer, right? Well, Anthropic’s got a neat trick up its sleeve: you can still kick off fresh conversations from the same account. And if you’re keen to dig deeper, you can branch out—think of it as creating a new thread from the old one by tweaking your own replies.

    Turning Talk into a Continuum

    • Start anew anytime: No more locked‑in chatter—just a fresh slate. You can drop in, grab a new GPT‑style feeling, and keep brainstorming.
    • Branch on demand: Got a wrinkle you want to tease out? Edit your past responses and watch Claude carry on, building a parallel dialogue.
    • All from the same login: One account, many adventures—no extra accounts or passwords needed.

    It’s Still a Work in Progress

    Anthropic is treating this feature like a live‑testing experiment. They’re tweaking and polishing it behind the scenes, listening to what users love and where the bumps are. Think of it as a beta version—you can try it, give feedback, and watch it evolve.

    Why It Matters

    In the fast‑moving world of AI conversations, the ability to retry or fork a dialogue is a game‑changer. It keeps the flow alive and lets users feel more in control—even when the AI decides to call it quits.

  • Fitch downgrades France's credit rating amid political crisis

    Fitch downgrades France's credit rating amid political crisis

    France’s credit downgrade deepens political and economic woes, piling pressure on French President Emmanuel Macron and new Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu.

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    Fitch Ratings lowered France’s credit score on Friday, citing mounting political instability and uncertainty over how the government will rein in ballooning public finances.
    The US-based agency cut France’s rating from “AA-” to “A+,” warning that the country’s already-heavy debt burden is set to keep rising until at least 2027 without decisive action.

    In its report, the US-headquartered agency said that the turmoil caused by the successive falls of government since the snap parliamentary elections in 2024 had weakened the country’s ability to implement “far-reaching fiscal consolidation”, and that it was unlikely to reduce the public deficit to below 3% of GDP in 2029 as outgoing Prime Minister François Bayrou had hoped.
    The downgrade comes just days after Bayrou was ousted as prime minister, having lost a parliamentary confidence vote due to his unpopular budget plan for next year.
    Bayrou had pushed for sharp spending cuts to shrink France’s deficit and debt levels, including slashing two bank holidays.
    Fitch also predicts that debt will rise from 113.2% of GDP in 2024 to 121% in 2027, “with no clear prospect of stabilisation in the following years”.
    “France’s rising public indebtedness constrains the capacity to respond to new shocks without further deterioration of public finances,” said the agency, expressing skepticism over whether the political crisis is anywhere near close to being resolved.

    “We expect the run-up to the 2027 presidential election to further limit the scope for fiscal consolidation in the near term, and believe it is highly likely that the political impasse will continue beyond the election,” Fitch warned in its report.
    That may act as a signal to investors, also not without consequences for the French, regarding a potential rise in interest rates on property loans.
    But experts interviewed by Euronews say that this downgrade was expected, adding that the impact on interest rates should remain limited.

    “Breaking the political paralysis

    France’s Minister of Economics and Finance Eric Lombard said he was “taking note” of the decision, while emphasising the “solidity of the French economy”.

    “The new Prime Minister has already begun consulting with the political forces represented in Parliament, with a view to adopting a budget for the nation and continuing efforts to restore our public finances,” he assured on social media platform X.
    However, the situation remains worrying, explained Hadrien Camatte, senior economist for France, Belgium and the eurozone at Natixis CIB, due to France’s “deficit being one of the highest in the EU at 5.8% in 2024, whereas the stabilising deficit is around 2.8%.”
    “Fiscal consolidation is difficult in a context of political fragmentation and social uprising. Nevertheless, France has several assets: a diversified economy, a more favourable demography than its neighbours, strong household savings and a solid business situation,” he said in an interview with Euronews.
    According to Sylvain Bersinger, economist and founder of Bersingéco, “France still has room for manoeuvre, but it is shrinking.”
    “The situation could become critical in a few years if the deficit is not reduced. First and foremost, we need to break the political paralysis and pass a budget that will reduce the deficit,” stressed Bersinger.

    Demand will drive France’s economy, says Fitch

    Although France is now the third most indebted country in the eurozone after Greece and Italy, several economic indicators are in the green with inflation among the lowest in the EU and the unemployment rate stable at 7.5% (+0.1% year-on-year).
    The French statistics office INSEE even offered a glimmer of optimism, predicting 0.8% GDP growth in 2025, slightly above earlier forecasts.
    “France is only moderately exposed to US trade, but the indirect impact of the 15% tariffs imposed by the United States on the EU as a whole will weigh on economic growth,” according to Fitch, for which an economic upturn could come from domestic demand.
    “Current political and strategic uncertainty could weigh on the economic climate, but France’s high household savings rate and solid corporate balance sheets should support consumption and investment, particularly in the current low-inflation environment.”

    What is the rating of other major eurozone economies?

    According to Hadrien Camatte, Germany and the Netherlands are the highest-rated countries by credit rating agencies.
    “The countries of southern Europe remain lower rated overall, especially Italy, given its debt levels and the legacy of the sovereign debt crisis. But the outlook of the rating agencies is more positive, unlike that of France,” explained the economist.
    Rival ratings agency S&P Global is expected to update its own outlook for France in November.
    There is no European agency accredited to rate the debt of EU member countries, due to a lack of consensus among the 27 Member States on the assessment criteria.

  • EU proposes to suspend Israeli access to European research fund over Gaza war

    EU proposes to suspend Israeli access to European research fund over Gaza war

    The European Commission is tabling the suspension of Israel’s access to the EU’s Horizon Research fund as a consequence of the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza. It comes after an accord between the two sides for Israel to substantially increase aid to Gaza has not materialised, say EU sources.

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    The European Commission has issued proposals to EU member states to partially suspend Israel’s access to the EU’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme in response to Israel’s ongoing actions in Gaza.
    EU Commissioners met on Monday today to discuss the move in response to the failure of Israel to implement a negotiated agreement to “substantially” improve access to food and medical supplies to Palestinians in Gaza. 

    The move would affect the participation of Israeli start-up businesses with “disruptive innovations and emerging technologies that have potential dual-use applications, such as cyber-security, drones and artificial intelligence”, a statement from the European Commission said.
    Until this decision, EU Commissioners including President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen have collectively refused to support any action against Israel.
    The proposal will be discussed and potentially voted on by member states as early as Tuesday when EU ambassadors from all 27 member states will convene. 
    Suspending Israel from the Horizon programme was one of ten options the European Commission and member states were presented with on foot of a report confirming Israel was in breach of international law due to the dire situation for civilians across the Palestinian Territories.
    Partially suspending Horizon would not require unanimous support across all 27 countries, and member states such as Austria, Germany, Hungary and the Czech Republic are still unlikely to agree to taking action against Israel. 

    However, the motion could pass with the qualified majority voting, which means larger state such as Italy would have to support it in order to meet the requirements.
    Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said the humanitarian situation in Gaza is “catastrophic” and demanded “the people of Gaza be given immediate, unfettered, safe access to humanitarian aid.”
    In a post on social media, Schoof also said his government could take even stronger action against Israel.
    The Hague supports the plan to suspend Israeli participation in Horizon, adding the Netherlands will “also press for further European measures, for example in the realm of trade”, he said.

    On 10 July the EU negotiated a “significant” improvement of humanitarian aid access into Gaza, including an increase of food trucks, and an agreement to “protect the lives of aid workers”, after the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas dispatched a delegation to Tel Aviv, including Christophe Bigot, the EU’s Special Envoy to the Middle East. 
    But strong consensus within the EU is that Israel has not enacted its part of the deal.
    “Clearly the situation in the last few days in Gaza is still awful, and although some more aid is getting in, distribution has been deadly,” a highly placed source told Euronews.
    The UN estimates over 1000 people have been killed at food distribution sites alone, and dozens have died of starvation in recent days. 
    “I hope they’re discussing actual measures and not just the situation in Gaza, we need action, not more declarations of how terrible it is,” said another EU diplomat close to the matter.
    “Focusing on one option forces member states to make a decision, I’m not sure how economically this will impact Israel, but it shows political pressure is really mounting” on Israel, said this diplomat, adding that they considered the Commission “has washed its hands of the matter” up to this point.