Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from eReadIT about money, health, lifestyle and more.

    loader

    Email Address*

    Name

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • I’ve Managed Dozens of Brand Campaigns in the Last Few Months — These 3 Tactics Quietly Outperform Everything Else
    • The Key to Growing Revenue May Be Right Under Your Nose. Here’s What Too Many Entrepreneurs Miss.
    • ‘It’s Basically Google for Sports’: Why a Former X Executive Thinks Sports Needs Its Own Social Network
    • This Site Was Known As the Internet’s ‘Odd Duck’ a Decade Ago. Now It’s Aiming for 1 Billion Users.
    • Customers Aren’t Looking for a Discount — They’re Looking for a Brand They Can Believe in. Here’s How to Become One.
    • Vision Gets All the Glory in Founder Narratives — But That’s Not What Actually Drives Success. Here’s What Does.
    • We Were Driving To Close Our IPO When It Was Pulled — Here’s How I Helped Save The Deal And Close A $40 Million Gap Overnight
    • Are You Falling Into These 5 AI Traps? Here’s How Smart Leaders Avoid Them.
    EREADITEREADIT
    • Local News
    • World
    • Politics
    • Money
    • Crypto
    • Technology
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Game
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Watch
    • Travel
    • Podcasts
    EREADITEREADIT
    Home»Money»The secret letter triggering a U.S.-China AI showdown
    Money

    The secret letter triggering a U.S.-China AI showdown

    BY Opeyemi Babalola June 25, 2026No Comments0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Anthropic sent a letter to the White House and several U.S. senators this week, alleging an industrial-scale effort by Alibaba to access its Claude models, according to a Seeking Alpha report.The accusation landed four days after Alibaba sued the Pentagon over an unrelated blacklist designation, CBS News confirmed. One company, two separate fights with Washington, in the same week.The letter named Alibaba’s Qwen lab and described roughly 25,000 fraudulent accounts running queries against Claude between April 22 and June 5, Bloomberg reported.Those accounts generated 28.8 million exchanges, a volume Anthropic called the largest distillation attempt it has documented against its own models.The queries were not casual chats. Anthropic said operators targeted Claude’s software engineering and agentic reasoning capabilities, the two skills investors weigh most heavily when pricing frontier AI valuations.This is not Anthropic’s first disclosure of this kind. In February, the company named DeepSeek, Moonshot AI, and MiniMax in a similar campaign totaling roughly 16 million exchanges across 24,000 accounts.Alibaba’s alleged campaign nearly doubled that volume, in roughly the same span of time, after the White House had already warned Chinese labs to stop, CNBC noted.Alibaba is fighting two fronts at onceThe distillation accusation is not Alibaba’s only problem in Washington. The Pentagon added the company to its list of alleged Chinese military companies on June 8, alongside Baidu and BYD.Alibaba disclosed in a regulatory filing that it considers the designation a mistake and intends to pursue all available legal action.Related: OpenAI, Cerebras deal was supposed to be good newsOn June 23, Alibaba followed through, suing the Defense Department in federal court in San Jose.The lawsuit argues the designation lacks evidentiary support and that Alibaba spent months supplying evidence the Pentagon never answered.The timing compounds the exposure. A blacklist fight over alleged military ties is now sitting next to an accusation that Alibaba’s own AI lab evaded an American company’s safeguards to harvest its technology.Investors weighing BABA don’t need to believe both claims. They only need to notice that both are now in the same file in Washington.

    Anthropic told U.S. senators that operators tied to Alibaba’s Qwen lab ran 28.8 million exchanges with Claude using 25,000 fake accounts.Neudecker/picture alliance/Getty Images

    The chip war just got a software sequelWashington’s effort to slow China’s AI progress began with hardware. Export controls on advanced chips have tightened steadily since 2022, and Nvidia’s access to the Chinese market remains tangled in licensing terms, even after a partial approval earlier this year.Distillation accusations extend that fight to software. If a Chinese lab can approximate a frontier model’s behavior by querying it millions of times, chip restrictions lose some of their bite.More Anthropic:Anthropic doubles down on safety with Claude ID checksAmazon CEO just made things uncomfortable for AnthropicWhite House latest verdict flips script on AnthropicThe model’s outputs become the resource worth protecting, not just the silicon that trained it.China has already narrowed the compute gap once, when DeepSeek built a competitive model on a fraction of the disclosed budget of its U.S. rivals.Whether that gap narrows again now depends less on chip supply and more on whether Washington can stop frontier model outputs from training Chinese rivals from outside its own servers.Wall Street hasn’t priced the resolutionNone of this resolves with a fine or a press release. Anthropic wants Washington to treat distillation as a national security threat, with enforcement tools currently reserved for chip exports.A bill that would create exactly those tools is sitting in Congress, unmoved since April.Alibaba, meanwhile, is asking a federal court to separate its commercial AI ambitions from its alleged military ties, an argument that gets harder to make the longer Anthropic’s letter circulates on Capitol Hill.BABA shares fell on the news and are still falling. This is a sign the market is treating this as more than a diplomatic spat.The open question is not whether Anthropic’s numbers hold up. It’s whether Washington decides distillation deserves the same blunt instruments already used on chips, before the next 28.8 million queries get logged.If the government already treats frontier AI models as strategic assets worth guarding like weapons, it has the logic it needs to pass a bill that protects them the same way.Related: White House latest verdict flips script on Anthropic   

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    I’ve Managed Dozens of Brand Campaigns in the Last Few Months — These 3 Tactics Quietly Outperform Everything Else

    June 26, 2026

    The Key to Growing Revenue May Be Right Under Your Nose. Here’s What Too Many Entrepreneurs Miss.

    June 26, 2026

    ‘It’s Basically Google for Sports’: Why a Former X Executive Thinks Sports Needs Its Own Social Network

    June 26, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Weather

    Trending

    Equatorial Guinea government resigns after failing to meet targets

    June 17, 2026

    Russian artist and Putin critic shot dead in Poland

    June 17, 2026

    Sydney woman wakes from induced coma more than a week after shark attack

    June 24, 2026

    65 High-Quality Things Under $20 Skyrocketing In Popularity On Amazon Now

    June 20, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from eReadIT about money, health, lifestyle and more.

    loader

    Email Address*

    Name

    eReadIT

    eReadIT enjoys delivering you valuable news that will educate, entertain, and enrich the lives of our readers from around the world and throughout your day. To stay up to date on the latest news check out our site.

    • Local News
    • World
    • Politics
    • Money
    • Crypto
    • Technology
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Game
    • Health
    • Watch
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
    • Podcasts
    • RSS
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    EREADIT LLC
    2400 Herodian Way SE, #220
    Smyrna, Georgia 30080
    Email Us : info@ereadit.com

    Copyright © 2026 EREADIT. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.