9 comments

  • drgo 3 hours ago
    "Nothing in the governing statute supports the Orwellian notion that an American company may be branded a potential adversary and saboteur of the U.S. for expressing disagreement with the government." Well.. we live in Orwellian times.
    • kolbe 46 minutes ago
      I am completely unfamiliar with anything like that happening in 1984. I am familiar with Orwell writing about the decline of logical reasoning in favor of vague and politically charged platitudes--like calling a political administration "Orwellian" when you're supposed to be discussing a legal decision.
      • striking 42 minutes ago
        Being marked an enemy of the state for disagreeing with the state to me sounds like thoughtcrime, plain and simple. How much more Orwellian can you get?
        • kolbe 35 minutes ago
          I remember neither that happening in 1984, nor is that a description of what is happening to Anthropic. Or is this is an Animal Farm reference instead?

          I remember Winston having a private conversation about political beliefs, and then being literally tortured into submission. And I remember Anthropic refusing a government order (albeit a stupid government order), and then being labeled a "supply chain risk." You can twist reality however you'd like though.

  • theindieman 3 hours ago
    Here’s the Preliminary Injunction Order. Essentially a total victory for Anthropic, but SCOTUS will certainly have the final say.

    https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cand.46...

  • ceejayoz 2 hours ago
    > In light of Anthropic’s showing on the merits, and the lack of evidence of harm to Defendants, the Court sets a nominal bond of $100.

    That must have been a bit of a goofy check to write.

    • zrail 1 hour ago
      (not a lawyer) I _think_ this is a result of Trump v CASA, where the Supreme Court determined that preliminary injunctions and TROs without a bond of some sort (which until then were fairly common) were invalid and unenforceable.
  • esbranson 2 hours ago
    Yes, more of this. (Direct, timely links to court dockets and documents on US Article III court cases.)
    • droidjj 1 hour ago
      Agreed! And shout-out to the people at CourtListener (the site hosting this PDF), who make millions of US court documents freely available to the public.
  • ChrisArchitect 21 minutes ago
  • wat10000 1 hour ago
    I understand why Anthropic used the name “Department of War” in their public communication. They want to be friendly to the people who like that name. But what the heck is it doing in an official court document? That’s not the entity’s legal name. It would be like if I sued IBM and named them “Big Blue” in my suit.
    • jmward01 16 minutes ago
      I can't wait for them to ignore the order because they weren't legally named in it. "What order? We are the DOD. No idea who the DOW is."
    • mistrial9 1 hour ago
      maybe Judge Lin is showing that she does get where they are coming from..
      • nutjob2 1 hour ago
        Maybe Judge Lin thinks the name used is irrelevant and doesn't want to distract from the relevant parts of the judgement.

        Or it may be the convention of using the name that the plaintiff or defendant has given themselves.

  • yubainu 1 hour ago
    [dead]