JPMorgan Chase cuts off Anthropic access for its Hong Kong staff
JPMorgan Chase removed Anthropic AI models from its internal allow list for employees in Hong Kong. This move follows a similar restriction by Goldman Sachs. The decision aligns with broader regulatory and geopolitical concerns regarding AI use outside the U.S.
What changed
New reports specify that Anthropic models were removed from an internal allow list and cite the Financial Times as a source.
Live updates
-
JPMorgan Chase restricts Anthropic AI access for Hong Kong staff
confidence 90%JPMorgan Chase removed Anthropic AI models from its internal allow list for employees in Hong Kong. This move follows a similar restriction by Goldman Sachs. The decision aligns with broader regulatory and geopolitical concerns regarding AI use outside the U.S.
What's confirmed:
- JPMorgan Chase restricted its Hong Kong employees from accessing Anthropic AI models.
- Goldman Sachs previously took similar action to limit advanced AI tools.
Still unconfirmed:
- The Financial Times cited three people familiar with the matter regarding the access cut.
- Reuters could not immediately verify the report of the access restriction.
-
JPMorgan Chase Blocks Anthropic AI Access for Hong Kong Staff
confidence 90%JPMorgan Chase has restricted its employees in Hong Kong from accessing Anthropic AI models. This action follows a similar move by Goldman Sachs. The decision reflects the impact of U.S. AI controls on banking operations in Asia.
What's confirmed:
- JPMorgan Chase blocked its Hong Kong staff from accessing Anthropic AI models.
- Goldman Sachs previously barred its Hong Kong bankers from using Anthropic's Claude in April.
Still unconfirmed:
- JPMorgan restricted access due to data privacy concerns.
- Goldman Sachs made its similar move in June.