Google Signs Classified AI Deal With Pentagon Amid Employee Opposition
![]() Google has reportedly signed a deal with the US Pentagon to use its artificial intelligence models for classified work. The tech company joins a growing list of Silicon Valley firms inking agreements with the US military. The agreement allows the Pentagon to use Google’s AI for “any lawful government purpose”, the report from the Information added, putting it alongside OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI, which also have deals to supply AI models for classified use. Similar agreements, both at Google and other AI firms, have sparked significant disagreements with the Pentagon and major employee pushback. Google’s agreement requires it to help in adjusting the company’s AI safety settings and filters at the government’s request, according to the Information report. The contract includes language stating, “the parties agree that the AI System is not intended for, and should not be used for, domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weapons (including target selection) without appropriate human oversight and control”. However, the agreement also says it does not give Google the right to control or veto lawful government operational decision-making, the report added. The Pentagon declined to comment on the matter. Google said it supported government agencies across both classified and non-classified projects. A spokesperson for the company said that the company remained committed to the consensus that AI should not be used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weaponry without appropriate human oversight. “We believe that providing API access to our commercial models, including on Google infrastructure, with industry-standard practices and terms, represents a responsible approach to supporting national security,” a spokesperson for Google told Reuters. The Pentagon has said it has no interest in using AI to conduct mass surveillance of Americans or to develop lethal weapons that operate without human involvement, but wants “any lawful use” of AI to be allowed. Anthropic faced fallout with the Pentagon earlier in the year after the startup refused to remove guardrails against using its AI for autonomous weapons or domestic surveillance, and the department designated the Claude-maker a supply-chain risk. Google’s agreement with the Pentagon comes despite employees’ fears that their work could be used in “inhumane or extremely harmful ways”, as a letter from Google employees reads. On Monday, more than 600 Google workers signed an open letter to the CEO, Sundar Pichai, expressing concerns about negotiations between Google and the Pentagon. |

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