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IndiaBusiness2 days ago

Canadian PM on ban on Anthropic's AI models: We will have done something wrong if we accept this

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney commented on the United States' decision to restrict access to Anthropic's advanced AI models, emphasizing the need for countries to avoid over-reliance on a limited number of American providers. He stated that accepting such restrictions without taking lessons and building alternative capabilities would be a mistake. Anthropic recently took its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models offline following a directive from the Trump administration, which aims to limit the export of cutting-edge AI technologies. Carney made these remarks ahead of the G7 summit, where AI's

ASML CEO Christophe Fouquet—the Dutch chip giant denies ever shipping an EUV machine to China, even as the US Commerce Secretary warns one may have slipped through.

US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has told ASML, the Dutch firm that builds the most important chipmaking machines on the planet, that Washington believes one of its most advanced tools may have slipped into China.

If true, it would mark a serious breach of the export controls the US has spent years building to keep cutting-edge chip technology out of Beijing's hands. The warning came across a series of recent meetings, according to Bloomberg, which first reported the story. Lutnick raised concerns directly with ASML's senior leadership about its extreme ultraviolet lithography machines, the EUV systems that are the only tools on Earth capable of printing the most advanced semiconductor patterns.

ASML has been barred from selling EUV to China since the first Trump administration.

Why an European company most people have never heard of matters so much

ASML isn't a household name, but it sits at the center of the entire AI buildout. Its machines make the chips that TSMC manufactures for Nvidia and Apple. There is no second supplier, a monopoly that has pushed ASML's market value into the neighborhood of $700 billion and made it Europe's most valuable public company. The systems themselves are roughly the size of a school bus and weigh 180 tons, per Reuters.

That scale is exactly why one missing machine would matter. A single EUV system in Chinese hands would represent one of the biggest cracks yet in the wall the US has built around advanced AI capability.

The company's flat denial, and the evidence Washington won't show

ASML isn't budging. The company told Reuters it has never shipped an EUV machine to China, nor any component or module specially designed for one. It says it tracks every machine it has ever made, all either in use with monitored customers or dismantled and returned. The catch is that US officials have so far declined to produce proof. Senior administration figures told Bloomberg they have evidence ASML shipped EUV-related components and transport gear to China, but they haven't shown it to Bloomberg or, it seems, to ASML. The Commerce Department didn't say whether it has evidence of an actual machine on Chinese soil. CEO Christophe Fouquet addressed the China question in a TechCrunch interview weeks before this broke.

His argument was simple: you can't reverse-engineer a machine you've never had. ASML built an internal firewall years ago that walls its China-based staff off from EUV technology and training. Solving the one genuinely new problem, generating EUV light, took the company two decades on its own.

What's at stake, and the bill waiting in the wings

There's commercial logic in ASML's denial too. The company expects roughly 20% of its 2026 revenue from already-permitted sales to China, mostly older deep ultraviolet tools. Risking the EUV ban over one illegal sale would put that money, and its standing as European industry's most valuable monopoly, on the line. The pressure may not stop at EUV. A bipartisan bill moving through Congress would ban all DUV shipments to China. It cleared a key committee in April, and the Trump administration hasn't taken a formal position.

Read the full article at Times of India
Source document: Bloomberg report

5 reports

Times of IndiaIndependentCenter2 days ago
US has a warning for one of Europe's biggest technology company

The US Commerce Secretary has warned ASML, a Dutch chipmaker, that one of its advanced EUV machines may have entered China despite export restrictions. ASML denies having shipped any such equipment to China. These machines are critical for producing cutting-edge semiconductors used in AI development.

Bias read (Center): The article presents facts without overtly favoring either side. It reports the US concern, ASML's denial, and provides context on the significance of ASML's role in global chip manufacturing. No loaded language or biased sourcing is evident.

Official sources cited

Times of IndiaIndependentCenter6 days ago
Canadian PM on ban on Anthropic's AI models: We will have done something wrong if we accept this

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney commented on the United States' decision to restrict access to Anthropic's advanced AI models, emphasizing the need for countries to avoid over-reliance on a limited number of American providers. He stated that accepting such restrictions without taking lessons and building alternative capabilities would be a mistake. Anthropic recently took its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models offline following a directive from the Trump administration, which aims to limit the export of cutting-edge AI technologies. Carney made these remarks ahead of the G7 summit, where AI's

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual summary of the Canadian Prime Minister's comments regarding AI model restrictions by the U.S., without apparent bias or slanted language. It provides balanced information without favoring any particular political stance.

Official sources cited

Times of IndiaIndependentCenter7 days ago
US ban on Anthropic models sparks AI sovereignty concerns

The article discusses the US ban on Anthropic models, highlighting the distinction between Fable 5 and Mythos 5 versions based on their safety measures. It notes cybersecurity experts' concerns that such restrictions might weaken defensive security initiatives and increase demands for independently developed AI systems.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information without overtly favoring any political perspective. It reports on technical distinctions between AI models and includes expert opinions without apparent ideological framing.

Official sources cited

  • other Cybersecurity experts
Times of IndiaIndependentCenter8 days ago
US ban on Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 has an Amazon 'link'

The US government has ordered Anthropic to stop access to two of its AI models, citing national security concerns. Anthropic disputes the decision, stating that the vulnerabilities identified by Amazon researchers were minor and already known. The shutdown affects users globally.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the situation factually, without apparent bias. It includes the positions of both the US government and Anthropic, and mentions Amazon researchers as the source of the identified vulnerabilities. There is no editorializing or loaded language.

Official sources cited

  • government US government
  • organisation Anthropic
  • organisation Amazon researchers
Times of IndiaIndependentCenter13 days ago
Google AI CEO Demis Hassabis on AGI: Humans only have a few years left to prepare

Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind, warned during a recent speech that humanity has only a few years to prepare for the emergence of artificial general intelligence (AGI). He described the current state of AI development as being in the 'foothills of the singularity' and highlighted Anthropic's Mythos model as an example of how rapidly AI capabilities are advancing. Hassabis emphasized the need for urgent action by governments and other stakeholders to ensure safe development of AI technologies.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced summary of Hassabis's statements without overtly favoring any particular perspective. It reports his warnings about AGI and the need for preparation without adding subjective commentary or emphasizing one side over another.

Official sources cited

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