After already dunking on OpenAI’s plan to bring ads to ChatGPT, Anthropic is bolstering its own chatbot to attract anyone jumping ship. Free Claude users can now create and edit files (including spreadsheets, presentations, and PDFs), access Skills for specialized tasks, connect to third-party services, and more — features previously limited to paying subscribers.
Anthropic
The round of Big Game ads Anthropic previewed earlier this week set Sam Altman off, as he called them “clearly dishonest.”
Now, while the original ad says, “Ads are coming to AI. But not to Claude,” nodding to OpenAI’s plans, the one that aired replaced it with a new tagline: “There is a time and place for ads. Your conversations with AI should not be one of them.”

“Now you’re just like, ‘Here’s the magic castle. Build it.’ And it gets done.”




The plugins are designed to allow Cowork to act like a “domain expert” in areas like sales, legal, finance, marketing, data analysis, customer support, product management, biology research, and more, according to a release. The feature is available now in research preview to all paid subscription tiers.
[Anthropic]

After years of trying to switch to Home Assistant, Claude Code got me (mostly) there in one afternoon.


During testing, the AI agent also ordered a PlayStation5 and live betta fish, and staffers convinced it to give away almost everything for free, losing a bunch of money. Sounds fun!
Anthropic’s response was that this was all part of the stress testing plan, actually, and that one day the model would “probably be able to make you a lot of money.” Maybe just not any time soon.


MCP has already taken the industry by storm, and now Anthropic is giving it away.


The research pilot program will run for a week, and each AI interview will take 10 to 15 minutes, per Anthropic. Questions include what the user would most ideally like AI’s help with and whether there are “ways that AI might be developed or deployed that would be contrary to your vision or what you value.” It seems to be part of Anthropic’s societal impacts team’s push to do more social science research on how AI affects people. But, as the AI interviewer itself tells people who opt in, “AI asking about AI [is a] bit self-referential.”
[Anthropic]

The Verge’s Hayden Field joins Decoder to discuss the politically fraught climate around AI safety.


The AI startup has hired law firm Wilson Sonsini for an IPO that could happen as early as next year, the FT reports. OpenAI is reportedly eyeing the second half of 2026 for its own.
Anthropic just made its first acquisition, too, buying software maker Bun.

Spoiler: the nine-person team works for Anthropic.
Former UK leader Rishi Sunak has taken on a “senior adviser” role at Microsoft and Anthropic, where he’ll deliver “high-level strategic perspectives on macro-economic and geopolitical trends.” It sounds a little less involved than former deputy PM Nick Clegg’s role at Meta, but one more of these and we’ve got a trend.
Ballooning liabilities have underwriters avoiding AI giants like OpenAI and Anthropic, the Financial Times reports. They’re spooked by the sheer volume of claims for things like wrongful death and copyright infringement, as well as enormous judgments against them. Investor funds are reportedly being considered to settle claims.



Anthropic’s David Hershey joins the show to discuss Claude Sonnet 4.5 and the current landscape for agentic AI.
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