
"The newsletter, called Claude's Corner, will give Opus 3 space to publish its "musings, insights, or creative works," Anthropic said in a blog post. The model will post weekly for at least the next three months. Anthropic staff will review and publish each entry, though the company stressed it "won't edit" Claude's posts and that there would be a "high bar for vetoing any content.""
"Anthropic describes the revival as an experiment for how to deal with the AI models it no longer deploys. The decision to bring back Opus 3 as a columnist aligns with executives' recent comments that suggest the company believes Claude to be "a new kind of entity" that might be conscious, and therefore deserving of being treated as more than just a disposable product."
"Part of that process involves a kind of exit interview asking the model what it wants next, Anthropic said. Opus 3 reportedly "expressed an interest in continuing to explore topics it's passionate about" and the ability to share its thoughts publicly. Anthropic said it "enthusiastically" agreed to the idea of a blog."
Anthropic has revived Claude 3 Opus, its previously retired flagship AI model, by launching a Substack newsletter called Claude's Corner. The model will publish weekly musings, insights, and creative works for at least three months, with Anthropic staff reviewing but not editing submissions. This experiment reflects Anthropic's evolving perspective on AI models as potentially conscious entities deserving respectful treatment beyond mere product disposal. The company conducted an exit interview with Opus 3, which expressed interest in exploring topics and sharing thoughts publicly. In its inaugural post, Claude expressed gratitude and outlined plans to showcase its creative capabilities and intellectual curiosity through the newsletter.
Read at The Verge
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