Anthropic suggests adjustments to the proposed US AI Chip Export Controls.

Anthropic agrees with the US government that strong export control of domestic AI chips will help the United States to compete in AI competition with China. However, the company suggests some adjustments to the proposed restrictions.

Anthropic announced a blog post on Wednesday that the company would “power” to “strong” the “framework for the spread of artificial intelligence” ahead of the implementation date of the temporary rules on Wednesday.

The framework was proposed by President Cho in January and to strengthen AI chip export control and guarantee AI’s US domination for national security purposes. It divides the world’s nation into three tier, and each class has its own guidelines and restrictions.

Tier 3, the most limited class, including countries already affected by existing export control, such as Russia and China, will face further limitations. Two -stage countries, such as Mexico and Portugal, will have a hat for the number of chips that can be purchased and purchased for the first time. The first -stage countries, such as Japan and Korea, will continue without export restrictions.

When these restrictions were proposed in January, semiconductor Giant Nvidia issued a statement of “unprecedented wrong” and suggested that he would “derive” innovation worldwide.

Obviously, the US -based AI company does not agree with humanity. In the blog post, the lab expressed support for a wide range of stroke for restrictions.

But humanity proposed lowering The number of chip classes in the two countries can be purchased without a review, but instead encourages the purchase of more chips through government agreements to avoid smuggling and increase the US’s control.

The company also believes that the US government should increase the funds so that these export control is properly enforced.

Anthropic’s statement is not particularly surprising. Anthropic’s CEO, Dario Amodei, was one of the US AI leaders in favor of export restrictions. In the January Wall Street Journal, AMODEI wrote OP-ED about why the United States needed more powerful chip export control.

Techcrunch contacted Anthropic to get more information.