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US Lifts Export Restrictions on Anthropic’s Fable 5

The US government removed foreign access restrictions on Anthropic PBC’s Fable 5 artificial intelligence model, clearing it for wider distribution after the startup resolved the Trump administration’s safety concerns. Bloomberg’s Minmin Low breaks down the latest developments. ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:   Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg…

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The US government removed foreign access restrictions on Anthropic PBC’s Fable 5 artificial intelligence model, clearing it for wider distribution after the startup resolved the Trump administration’s safety concerns. Bloomberg’s Minmin Low breaks down the latest developments.
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12 Comments

12 Comments

  1. @ImranLiqqat

    July 1, 2026 at 10:37 am

    Ccp now copy it soon

  2. @eaman11

    July 1, 2026 at 11:07 am

    This is BS: the open weight models release not only the model, also papers that explain the iprovements for other to use + often datasets or even “world models” to train them.
    Ant and GPT keep saying that all they do is distilling: it’s simply not true. It that is true why don’t they distill the smaller / cheaper open weights models and make even smaller / cheaper version that they can compete with?

    • @daShadoSage

      July 1, 2026 at 12:15 pm

      False. They’re open weight not open source. They do not release the underlying training data, training methodologies, etc.

      And to your last point, that’s a business decision. The companies make more money with closed weight frontier powerful models for enterprise and governments. Distilling their own models undercuts their margins and cannibalizes their tip tier models.

      But, Anthropic has Haiku while OpenAI is coming out with their Luna set of models. But even closer to what you’re asking, Google has Gemma family of open weight models distilled from Gemini. They just released Gemma 4

    • @eaman11

      July 1, 2026 at 5:08 pm

      @daShadoSage You really can’t read, can you?

    • @daShadoSage

      July 1, 2026 at 6:04 pm

      ​@eaman11 You really can’t articulate a sound rebuttal, can you? So, immediate knee jerk reaction is emotional. Your open questions were answered. If you don’t like the answers, that’s on you. It’s why you wouldn’t get hired in the space.

    • @eaman11

      July 1, 2026 at 6:53 pm

      @daShadoSage Answer to what?
      You didn’t even address my original post: who mentioned open source?
      And who is “they”? NVIDIA? Mistral? Deepseek?

    • @daShadoSage

      July 1, 2026 at 8:51 pm

      ​@eaman11 Did you not read your own statements and questions?​ You asked “It that is true why don’t they distill the smaller / cheaper weights models and make even smaller / cheaper open weights models and make even smaller / cheaper version that they can compete with?”

      So, you’re the one that asked about “open weight” directly. I replied.

      And I said who… did you not click “Read more” to make it to the end of my comment? I specifically named Anthropic, Google (Alphabet), and OpenAI. I didn’t bother to mention others including Nvidia’s Nemotron who now has 3 classes of open weight models including the recently released Ultra. I thought my answer was sufficient to answer your open question.

  3. @CPATuttle

    July 1, 2026 at 11:55 am

    Is she not suppose to be bias?

    • @daShadoSage

      July 1, 2026 at 12:14 pm

      What’s bias here?

    • @118Columbus

      July 1, 2026 at 7:52 pm

      @daShadoSageChina

    • @daShadoSage

      July 1, 2026 at 8:51 pm

      ​@118Columbus What about them?

  4. @118Columbus

    July 1, 2026 at 7:52 pm

    Yvonne Man is cute and Minmin Low is even cuter!

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Bloomberg Technology

Meta to Build Cloud Business to Sell Excess AI Compute | Bloomberg Tech 7/01/2026

Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow breaks down Meta’s plans to develop its own cloud infrastructure business aimed at selling access to AI computing power and models. Plus, the Trump administration lifts foreign access restrictions on Anthropic’s Fable 5 AI model. And, Lime CEO Wayne Ting joins as the company gets ready to debut on the Nasdaq. 00:00:00…

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Bloomberg’s Ed Ludlow breaks down Meta’s plans to develop its own cloud infrastructure business aimed at selling access to AI computing power and models. Plus, the Trump administration lifts foreign access restrictions on Anthropic’s Fable 5 AI model. And, Lime CEO Wayne Ting joins as the company gets ready to debut on the Nasdaq.

00:00:00 – Bloomberg Tech Begins
00:01:17 – Lynn Doan, Bloomberg News
00:04:25 – Seema Shah, Principal Asset Management
00:09:36 – Shirin Ghaffary, Bloomberg News
00:12:11 – Allie Mellen, Forrester Research
00:16:58 – Wayne Ting, Lime CEO
00:23:43 – Mandeep Singh, Bloomberg Intelligence
00:29:08 – Mark Gurman, Bloomberg News
00:32:09 – Matthew Boesler, Bloomberg News
00:35:17 – Neil Keegan, Marlinspike CEO
00:41:37 – Katherine Doherty, Bloomberg News

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“Bloomberg Technology” is our daily news program focused exclusively on technology, innovation and the future of business hosted by Ed Ludlow from San Francisco and Caroline Hyde in New York.

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Bloomberg Technology

Marlinspike Raises New Fund to Back Defense, Industrial Startups

Marlinspike Partners just raised an oversubscribed $127 million Fund II to “rearm America,” the latest sign that investors are piling into defense startups. Marlinspike co-founder and CEO Neil Keegan, who also served six years as a US Navy Surface Warfare Officer, joins Ed Ludlow on “Bloomberg Tech.” ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology…

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Marlinspike Partners just raised an oversubscribed $127 million Fund II to “rearm America,” the latest sign that investors are piling into defense startups. Marlinspike co-founder and CEO Neil Keegan, who also served six years as a US Navy Surface Warfare Officer, joins Ed Ludlow on “Bloomberg Tech.”
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Uber-Backed Lime Raises $174 Million in Public Debut

The IPO window is showing more signs of life, with Uber-backed Lime raising $174 million in its public debut, pricing its shares right at the midpoint of the expected range. Lime CEO Wayne Ting says the company is going public to attract new investors, and is thinking about M&A, though “the bar is high.” He…

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The IPO window is showing more signs of life, with Uber-backed Lime raising $174 million in its public debut, pricing its shares right at the midpoint of the expected range. Lime CEO Wayne Ting says the company is going public to attract new investors, and is thinking about M&A, though “the bar is high.” He joins Ed Ludlow from the Nasdaq on “Bloomberg Tech.”
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