Speaking at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, Altman said governments should ultimately hold more authority than private companies and warned against corporate decisions that undermine democratic processes.
His remarks come amid tensions between OpenAI and Anthropic leadership. According to a report by The Information, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei criticised Altman’s ties with the Trump administration in an internal memo to employees last week.
In the memo, Amodei reportedly said Anthropic had avoided offering what he described as “dictator-style praise” for US President Donald Trump.
Addressing the situation on Thursday, Altman suggested OpenAI had sought to defuse the dispute, saying the company did not intend to escalate the situation.
Anthropic OpenAI feud
In a message to employees, Amodei criticised OpenAI for moving quickly to secure a Pentagon deal after Anthropic rejected broader military use of its models.
“The main reason [OpenAI] accepted [the DoD’s deal], and we did not, is that they cared about placating employees, and we actually cared about preventing abuses,” he wrote.
Earlier this week, Altman admitted the company’s move may have appeared “opportunistic and sloppy.”
Altman said OpenAI’s agreement would contain the same ethical limits that Anthropic had sought, including restrictions around domestic mass surveillance.
Despite the rhetoric, negotiations have resumed. Amodei, FT reported, has restarted discussions with the Pentagon over acceptable guardrails for military use of Anthropic’s models. A revised agreement could allow defence agencies to continue using Anthropic’s AI without formally blacklisting the company.
The Pentagon narrative
After Anthropic demanded safeguards to prevent the US Department of War from using its AI systems for domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons, President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to stop using its products.
Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth went further, declaring Anthropic a ‘supply-chain risk’: a label usually reserved for companies from countries the US sees as adversaries.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei called the move “retaliatory and punitive”. He stressed that the company would challenge the designation in court if any such formal steps are taken by the government.
Also Read: ETtech Explainer: Anthropic’s rapid rise, Pentagon standoff and everything in between


