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In this episode of "In the long run", we unpack the escalating clash between the U.S. “Department of War” (Pentagon) and Anthropic, centered on whether a private AI company can restrict government use of its models, especially around mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons.
We explore how today’s “legal” frameworks lag behind AI capabilities, making large-scale surveillance technically easy (and sometimes still lawful).
Finally, we connect the rise of AI coding agents and “vibe coding” to a shake-up in SaaS. How will this impact Software as a service companies, how many subscription apps could become trivial to recreate with personalized agents, pushing SaaS value toward support, accountability, and enterprise-grade reliability rather than basic functionality.
By Joao Dias Ferreira, Marie Bemler, Jim TolmanIn this episode of "In the long run", we unpack the escalating clash between the U.S. “Department of War” (Pentagon) and Anthropic, centered on whether a private AI company can restrict government use of its models, especially around mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons.
We explore how today’s “legal” frameworks lag behind AI capabilities, making large-scale surveillance technically easy (and sometimes still lawful).
Finally, we connect the rise of AI coding agents and “vibe coding” to a shake-up in SaaS. How will this impact Software as a service companies, how many subscription apps could become trivial to recreate with personalized agents, pushing SaaS value toward support, accountability, and enterprise-grade reliability rather than basic functionality.