

The dark horse of AI labs
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Perhaps it is inevitable that Anthropic, an artificial-intelligence (AI) lab founded by do-gooders, attracts snark in Silicon Valley. The company, which puts its safety mission above making money, has an in-house philosopher and a chatbot with the Gallic-sounding name of Claude.
Even so, the profile of some of those who have recently attacked Anthropic is striking. One is Jensen Huang, boss of Nvidia, the most valuable company on Earth. After Dario Amodei, Anthropic’s chief executive, raised the spectre of big job losses as a result of advances in AI, Mr Huang bluntly retorted: “I pretty much disagree with almost everything he says." Another is David Sacks, a venture capitalist (VC) who is one of President Donald Trump’s closest tech advisers.
In a recent podcast, he and his co-hosts accused Anthropic of being part of a “doomer industrial complex". Mr Amodei gives short shrift to such criticisms. In an interview on the eve of the release of Mr Trump’s AI Action Plan, he laments that the political winds have shifted against safety.
Yet even as he cuts a lonely figure in Washington, Anthropic is quietly becoming a powerhouse in business-to-business (B2B) AI. Mr Amodei can barely suppress his excitement. After his firm’s annualised recurring revenue grew roughly tenfold over the course of last year, to $1bn, it is now “substantially beyond" $4bn, putting Anthropic possibly “on pace for another 10x" growth in 2025.
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