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ETtechLed by cofounder Jack Clark in his new role as head of public benefit, the institute will combine research from multiple teams to analyse the economic, social, security, and governance implications of powerful AI systems.
“AI progress continues to accelerate and the stakes are getting higher, so I’ve changed my role at @AnthropicAI to spend more time creating information for the world about the challenges of powerful AI,” Clark wrote in a post on X on Wednesday.
Anthropic has predicted that there will be dramatic changes in the way the world works in the coming two years. “Because of this, extremely powerful AI, like the kind our CEO Dario Amodei describes in Machines of Loving Grace [an essay], is coming far sooner than many think,” the company wrote in a blog post.
Drawing on internal research, the institute will study issues such as job displacement, economic transformation, AI values, cybersecurity risks, and the potential emergence of recursive self-improving AI systems.
As Anthropic builds its in-house frontier LLM capabilities, the Institute aims to tell the world about its learnings along the way and to partner with third-party entities to be able to combat the risks.
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Among the first hires are Matt Botvinick, Anton Korinek and Zoë Hitzig. Botvinick, a resident fellow at Yale Law School, who was previously with Google DeepMind and Princeton, will lead research in AI and the rule of law. Korinek will look at economic research, while Hitzig will bring economic analysis to model training and development.
The company also announced the expansion of its existing public policy team. Sarah Heck, who currently leads the external affairs team at the startup, will also lead the public policy team.
“We are opening our first office in DC this spring, and are quickly expanding our global policy footprint,” the company added.



