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The Government Just Approved AI Models Customer by Customer. Nobody Voted on That.

Anderson Liam
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OpenAI’s release of GPT 5.6, its newest frontier model, will proceed in a way that has never happened before in the commercial AI industry: the White House’s Office of the National Cyber Director and Office of Science and Technology Policy asked the company to share the model only with a select group of government-approved partners during an initial preview period, and OpenAI agreed. In a memo to employees this week, CEO Sam Altman described the arrangement directly – the government would be “approving access customer by customer” during the preview, after which OpenAI hopes to proceed with a broader release a “couple of weeks later.” He added that this is “not our preferred long-term model” and that the company will work with the government toward a more sustainable approach for future releases. The specific phrase, customer-by-customer government approval for a commercial AI product, is what NewsTrackerToday reads as the administrative reality that arrived without a regulatory framework to support it.

The context is the Anthropic episode. The White House and Anthropic view GPT 5.6 as having capabilities “on par” with Anthropic’s Mythos model, which the Commerce Department restricted in June with an export control order that forced Anthropic to disable global access. OpenAI agreed to the limited rollout as a path toward public release during what it acknowledged is a “strange moment” with no true federal regulatory framework in place for new frontier AI models. That phrase – “strange moment” – is Altman’s politic way of describing a situation where different agencies take different actions against different companies with no published criteria, no appeals process, and no consistent legal authority. The request to OpenAI came through the White House. The restriction on Anthropic came through the Commerce Department. Both actions concern frontier AI cybersecurity capability. They used different instruments, different processes, and produced different commercial outcomes.

Daniel Wu, who covers geopolitics and energy, places the development in institutional history: “The U.S. has had export control frameworks for dual-use technology since the Cold War, but those frameworks were built around hardware and cryptography, not probabilistic software systems that can be retrained. The application of national security oversight to commercial AI model releases is happening in real time, through ad hoc requests and informal agreements, before the administrative law infrastructure exists to support it. That’s not unusual in the history of technology regulation – nuclear licensing, aviation safety, financial derivatives all went through a period where practice preceded law. The problem is that the practice period for AI capability oversight may be shorter than the practice period was for those technologies.” The first-ever preemptive U.S. government request to limit a commercial AI model release is what the OpenAI episode holds up as precedent.

Ethan Cole reads the commercial and institutional implication directly: “Frontier AI release, limited to government-approved customers during preview. No published criteria. No public review process. No appeal mechanism. This is the regulatory posture that applies to U.S. frontier AI right now. Every company filing for an IPO in this environment is filing with a material risk factor that did not exist twelve months ago.” The agencies involved in the GPT 5.6 request – the Office of the National Cyber Director and OSTP – also requested that OpenAI staff work closely with them on the release, which they did. That cooperative engagement is a different character from the Anthropic episode, where the Commerce Secretary’s letter arrived without prior consultation. The distinction between a cooperative request and a directive is what NewsTrackerToday catches as the Anthropic mirror: OpenAI agreed willingly; Anthropic had no equivalent choice.

Brad Carson, head of Public First, a bipartisan pro-AI safety PAC, described the situation as presenting an “ad hoc, personalized, opaque, possibly lawless approach” to AI governance. Trump signed an executive order earlier in June asking AI companies with advanced models to voluntarily submit them for government review 30 days before release, but the framework for implementing that order has not been established. The agencies making these requests have no formal regulatory authority over AI model releases. The companies complying are doing so voluntarily. The mechanisms by which the government determined that GPT 5.6 and Mythos present unacceptable risk for general release but GPT 5.5 and Claude 3 do not have not been publicly described. That gap between exercise of power and published legal authority is what News Tracker Today marks as the actual structural condition the commercial AI sector now operates under.

The uncomfortable implication of the GPT 5.6 situation is not that the government is wrong to worry about frontier AI cybersecurity capability. It is not. Advanced models that can identify and exploit software vulnerabilities at machine speed represent a genuine dual-use risk. The uncomfortable implication is that the government’s response to that concern is an informal customer-by-customer approval process run through the White House without published standards, binding legal authority, or due process protections for the companies subject to it. OpenAI’s acceptance of the arrangement, framed as voluntary collaboration, is also the only available path to a public release. What does it mean when a company’s choice is between compliance with an informal request and the unilateral restriction that Anthropic experienced? The answer is what the phrase “not our preferred long-term model” acknowledges, and it is what this week’s development registers as permanent until Congress acts.

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