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Latest news with #Claude3.5Sonnet

Anthropic co-founder on cutting access to Windsurf: 'It would be odd for us to sell Claude to OpenAI'
Anthropic co-founder on cutting access to Windsurf: 'It would be odd for us to sell Claude to OpenAI'

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Anthropic co-founder on cutting access to Windsurf: 'It would be odd for us to sell Claude to OpenAI'

Anthropic Co-founder and Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan said his company cut Windsurf's direct access to Anthropic's Claude AI models largely because of rumors and reports that OpenAI, its largest competitor, is acquiring the AI coding assistant. "We really are just trying to enable our customers who are going to sustainably be working with us in the future," said Kaplan during an onstage interview Thursday with TechCrunch at TC Sessions: AI 2025. "I think it would be odd for us to be selling Claude to OpenAI," Kaplan said. The comment comes just a few weeks after Bloomberg reported that OpenAI was acquiring Windsurf for $3 billion. Earlier this week, Windsurf said that Anthropic cut its direct access to Claude 3.5 Sonnet and Claude 3.7 Sonnet, two of the more popular AI models for coding, forcing the startup to find third-party computing providers on relatively short notice. Windsurf said it was disappointed in Anthropic's decision and that it might cause short-term instability for users trying to access Claude via Windsurf. Windsurf declined to comment on Kaplan's remarks, and an OpenAI spokesperson did not immediately respond to TechCrunch's request. The companies have not confirmed the acquisition rumors. Part of the reason Anthropic cut Windsurf's access to Claude, according to Kaplan, is because the company is quite computing-constrained today. Anthropic would like to reserve its computing for what Kaplan characterized as "lasting partnerships." However, Kaplan said the company hopes to greatly increase the availability of models it can offer users and developers in the coming months. He added that Anthropic has just started to unlock capacity on a new computing cluster from its partner, Amazon, which he says is "really big and continues to scale." As Anthropic pulls away from Windsurf, Kaplan said he's collaborating with other customers building AI coding tools, such as Cursor — a company Kaplan said Anthropic expects to work with for a long time. Kaplan rejected the idea that Anthropic was in competition with companies like Cursor, which is developing its own AI models. Meanwhile, Kaplan says Anthropic is increasingly focused on developing its own agentic coding products, such as Claude Code, rather than AI chatbot experiences. While companies like OpenAI, Google, and Meta are competing for the most popular AI chatbot platform, Kaplan said the chatbot paradigm was limiting due to its static nature, and that AI agents would in the long run be much more helpful for users.

Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report
Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report

Economic Times

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report

Tech major Amazon is in advanced talks to roll out an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, Cursor, across its workforce, amid pressure from its employees seeking access to the popular AI chatbot, according to internal company communications reviewed by Business Insider. The report added, an Amazon HR manager who oversees the company's AI adoption told employees via messaging platform Slack that the company is working "asap" to integrate Cursor. Though they added that the deployment might take some time, as 'a few high priority security issues' to Amazon's tight security requirements. This move indicates a significant shift for the US tech major, which typically doesn't encourage its employees to use any external AI tools since the company provides its own AI coding assistant called Q and an internal AI chatbot named 'Cedric'. The report further added that in a Slack group dedicated to Cursor discussion, approximately 1,500 Amazon employees participated to show interest in the tool. Internal polling results within the group showed more than 60 Amazon employees preferred Cursor over other competing tools, such as Windsurf, which only 10 people chose. Last year, Cursor's desktop application gained popularity, particularly for its ability to assist with coding using Anthropic's Claude 3.5 Sonnet model. Its features got a further boost when Microsoft added the model to GitHub Copilot. The platform's rise continued after AI researcher Andrej Karpathy helped popularise the idea of 'vibe coding', where developers let AI take the lead on writing code. By March, the tool had over one million daily users, highlighting its rapid growth and appeal. Company chief Andy Jassy acknowledged Cursor's popularity during last month's earnings call, citing the company as a key driver behind the "explosion of coding agents."Also Read: Windsurf vs Cursor: Inside OpenAI's quest for an AI coding startup

Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report
Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report

Time of India

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Amazon racing to roll out AI chatbot Cursor amid employee pressure: Report

Tech major Amazon is in advanced talks to roll out an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, Cursor, across its workforce, amid pressure from its employees seeking access to the popular AI chatbot, according to internal company communications reviewed by Business Insider. The report added, an Amazon HR manager who oversees the company's AI adoption told employees via messaging platform Slack that the company is working "asap" to integrate Cursor. Though they added that the deployment might take some time, as 'a few high priority security issues' to Amazon's tight security requirements. This move indicates a significant shift for the US tech major, which typically doesn't encourage its employees to use any external AI tools since the company provides its own AI coding assistant called Q and an internal AI chatbot named 'Cedric'. The report further added that in a Slack group dedicated to Cursor discussion, approximately 1,500 Amazon employees participated to show interest in the tool. Internal polling results within the group showed more than 60 Amazon employees preferred Cursor over other competing tools, such as Windsurf, which only 10 people chose. Last year, Cursor's desktop application gained popularity, particularly for its ability to assist with coding using Anthropic's Claude 3.5 Sonnet model. Its features got a further boost when Microsoft added the model to GitHub Copilot. The platform's rise continued after AI researcher Andrej Karpathy helped popularise the idea of ' vibe coding ', where developers let AI take the lead on writing code. By March, the tool had over one million daily users, highlighting its rapid growth and appeal. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories Company chief Andy Jassy acknowledged Cursor's popularity during last month's earnings call, citing the company as a key driver behind the "explosion of coding agents." Also Read: Windsurf vs Cursor: Inside OpenAI's quest for an AI coding startup

Windsurf CEO reveals that Anthropic is restricting access to Claude AI models
Windsurf CEO reveals that Anthropic is restricting access to Claude AI models

The Hindu

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Hindu

Windsurf CEO reveals that Anthropic is restricting access to Claude AI models

AI coding startup Windsurf has said that Anthropic has removed almost all access to their Claude 3.7 Sonnet and Claude 3.5 Sonnet AI models. CEO Varun Mohan said that Anthropic's decision to block first-party access was done with 'less than five days of notice,' in a post on X. 'Given the short notice, we may see some short-term Claude 3.x model availability issues as we have very quickly ramped up capacity on other inference providers, but we believe we have now secured sufficient near term capacity,' he went on. Last month, post the launch of Anthropic's latest Claude Sonnet 4 and Opus 4 models, Mr. Mohan wrote in another post on X that the AI firm hadn't given direct access to them. He added that Windsurf has been 'very clear to Anthropic that this is not our desire,' and that they want to pay them for the 'full capacity,' but the short notice and the eventual decision by Anthropic was 'disappointing.' However, he said that they had worked to make Windsurf work much better with Gemini 2.5 Pro as an alternative. 'Gemini 2.5 Pro (now very high quality on Windsurf, new 0.75x promo rate), GPT 4.1, and more are all unaffected,' he stated in the same post. It was reported in April that Anthropic rival, OpenAI was in talks with Windsurf to acquire them as the AI vibe coding segment heat up.

Software developers take note, Windsurf CEO Varun Mohan slams Anthropic over Claude access
Software developers take note, Windsurf CEO Varun Mohan slams Anthropic over Claude access

India Today

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • India Today

Software developers take note, Windsurf CEO Varun Mohan slams Anthropic over Claude access

Windsurf CEO Varun Mohan has slammed Anthropic for allegedly cutting off Windsurf's first-party access to Claude 3.x models (Claude 3.5 Sonnet, 3.7 Sonnet, and 3.7 Sonnet Thinking) with less than a week's notice forcing the company to make immediate adjustments for users, particularly those on the free tier. This is not a one-off recently accused Anthropic of deliberately keeping Windsurf users from accessing the new Claude Sonnet 4 and Opus 4 models on day one [May 22, 2025], unlike some competitors such as Cursor and GitHub little bit of context and reading between the lines is enough to state the obvious. Windsurf is a popular AI-native IDE (Integrated Development Environment) which is used by over a million developers globally - it was recently acquired by OpenAI, which is a competitor to Amazon-backed Anthropic. According to one far-fetched conspiracy theory on the internet, Anthropic may not want OpenAI collecting its data, both query and response, to seemingly train and improve its own AI. This could be a reason why it is taking these measures. Through X (formerly Twitter) and a dedicated blog post, Mohan informed that while Windsurf has some capacity from other inference providers, it's currently insufficient to meet existing demand due to the short notice window from Anthropic and so, users may experience some capacity issues with Claude 3.x models. He reiterated that this was a 'short-term' is actively working to bring new capacity online, he said, while launching a promotional scheme for Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro, offering it at 0.75x its original price while highlighting it as 'a strong alternative' for users during this had implemented a "bring-your-own-key" (BYOK) system for Claude Sonnet 4 and Opus 4 as a workaround for users to access these models through their own API keys from Anthropic. Now, it is extending this BYOK option to include the Claude 3.x models - while removing direct access for free users and those on Pro plan theory why all this might be happening, is that, with OpenAI now owning Windsurf, there is an off chance that it would start to limit options to boost the use of its own AI. At the time of writing though, Mohan has emphasised Windsurf's commitment to providing the best product and access to all models - including Anthropic's.'We have been very clear to the Anthropic team that our priority was to keep the Anthropic models as recommended models and have been continuously willing to pay for the capacity,' he said, adding that 'We are concerned that Anthropic's conduct will harm many in the industry, not just Windsurf.'It will be interesting to see how things pan out in the future.

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