Anthropic ad draws criticism for unsettling imagery and tone

Anthropic ad draws criticism for unsettling imagery and tone

7 reported

Anthropic’s latest advertisement, titled “There’s hope in hard questions,” has drawn criticism for its unsettling imagery and doomer-ist tone, according to a TechCrunch report. The ad begins with a video of a burning house and includes still images of facial recognition surveillance, a homeless person, tombstones in a cemetery, and laborers in a mine. A voice-over features people asking questions such as “Can AI be trusted?” and “Who’s gonna hit the brakes if we need to?” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted on X that he thought the ad was satire. Other tech industry observers criticized the ad’s imagery and tone, with some focusing on a shot that appears to be from Arlington National Cemetery. The report notes that Anthropic has previously used marketing to position itself as an ethical alternative to other AI companies.

What’s reported

The ad is titled “There’s hope in hard questions.”
It begins with a video of a burning house and includes still images of facial recognition surveillance, a homeless person, tombstones in a cemetery, and laborers in a mine.
The voice-over asks questions including “Can AI be trusted?” and “Who’s gonna hit the brakes if we need to?”
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman posted on X: “i thought this was satire, kept looking for the handle to be spelled c1audeai or something.”
One commenter said the ad includes a shot that appears to be from Arlington National Cemetery.
Another person wrote: “Out of everything in that ad, this part was exceptionally weird and sinister.”
In February, during the Super Bowl, Anthropic ran ads that humorously criticized OpenAI’s decision to include ads in ChatGPT.

Key figures

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI
Anthropic (company, no specific individuals named)

Sources: TechCrunch

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