情報漏洩と批判の後、OpenAIが国防総省契約に安全対策条項を追加
OpenAIはAnthropicから引き継いだ米国防総省との契約について、従業員やユーザーからの批判を受けて、セーフガード条項を追加したと報じられている。
キーポイント
契約引き継ぎと批判の発生
OpenAIがAnthropicから米国防総省との契約を引き継いだことで、従業員とユーザーから大きな批判が発生した。
セーフガード条項の追加
批判を受けて、OpenAIは契約にセーフガード条項を追加する対応を行った。
CEOによる軌道修正の試み
サム・アルトマンCEOが批判に対応し、方針の軌道修正を図っている。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この記事は、AI企業の軍事関連契約に対する倫理的懸念と、それに対する企業の対応という重要な問題を浮き彫りにしている。OpenAIのような主要プレイヤーの動向は、業界全体のガバナンスと社会的責任の在り方に影響を与える可能性がある。
編集コメント
AI企業の軍事利用に関する倫理的ジレンマと、批判への対応という現実的な課題を扱った記事。主要AI企業の社会的責任とガバナンスの重要性を示している。

OpenAIがアンソロピックの国防総省との取引を引き継ぐために介入した後、ChatGPTメーカーは従業員とユーザーの双方から反発に直面しました。現在、CEOのサム・アルトマンは方針転換を図っています。
本記事『情報漏洩と激しい批判を受け、OpenAIは国防総省との契約に保護条項を追加』は、The Decoderで最初に公開されました。
原文を表示
Mar 3, 2026

- OpenAI researcher wants democratic guardrails before AI reaches intelligence agencies
After OpenAI stepped in to take over Anthropic's Pentagon deal, the ChatGPT maker faced backlash from both inside and outside the company.
OpenAI employees publicly questioned the deal, and some ChatGPT users canceled their accounts and switched to Anthropic's Claude, pushing it to number one in the Apple App Store. That was enough to get OpenAI's attention.
Now the company is adding new clauses to its contract with the US Department of Defense (DoD). CEO Sam Altman posted the details on X, sharing a message originally written for internal staff.
The biggest addition: the AI system cannot be used *intentionally* to surveil *US citizens—*not even indirectly as an analysis tool after purchasing commercial personal data, as implied by the following added language.
Consistent with applicable laws, including the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, National Security Act of 1947, FISA Act of 1978, the AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals.
For the avoidance of doubt, the Department understands this limitation to prohibit deliberate tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of U.S. persons or nationals, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information.
via X
The DoD also confirms that intelligence agencies like the NSA aren't allowed to use OpenAI's services. That would require a separate contract.
Altman stresses that the technology isn't ready for many use cases and that OpenAI still doesn't fully understand what safeguards are needed for secure deployment. According to Altman, these issues will be worked out step by step with the DoD, including technical protections. He also says OpenAI intends to operate through democratic processes and would refuse unconstitutional orders.
Altman admits the original Friday announcement was rushed and poorly communicated. He also repeats that Anthropic shouldn't be classified as a Security Critical Provider (SCR) and should get the same contract terms.
OpenAI researcher wants democratic guardrails before AI reaches intelligence agencies
OpenAI researcher Noam Brown, the mind behind last year's reasoning model breakthrough, publicly backed the revised terms on X. He points out that the original contract language left too many open questions, especially around new surveillance capabilities that AI makes possible.
"The language is now updated to address this, but I also strongly believe that the world should not have to rely on trust in AI labs or intelligence agencies for their safety and security," Brown writes.
These gaps need to be closed through democratic processes before intelligence agencies get access, he argues. Brown warns about a slow normalization effect where democratic oversight gets sidelined for major policy decisions.
He also says he plans to get more personally involved in AI policy at OpenAI. Given how fast the research is moving, he believes it's critical that researchers have a voice when policy decisions are being made.
The fact that OpenAI is walking things back this aggressively likely comes down to a string of leaks over the weekend. They paint a picture of an AI company that actively pushed the Pentagon deal forward while Anthropic was still at the negotiating table.
According to the New York Times, Altman reached out to Pentagon technology chief Emil Michael just one day after the Pentagon gave Anthropic its ultimatum. Within 24 hours, the two sides had a framework in place. OpenAI agreed that its AI could be used for "all lawful use," the exact wording Anthropic had been trying to avoid.
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