China’s Alibaba will ban employees from using Anthropic’s programming tool Claude Code, starting on July 10, according to multiple reports. Anthropic already prohibits Chinese companies, as well as ...
Alibaba banned Claude Code after security researchers found Anthropic had embedded steganographic tracking code to identify Chinese users. The ban follows Anthropic’s accusation that Alibaba ran the ...
Alibaba, the Chinese tech giant, has banned employees from using Anthropic’s AI-powered coding assistant Claude Code in workplace environments, citing alleged security risks involving embedded ...
Alibaba has ordered its employees to stop using Anthropic’s Claude Code, citing security vulnerabilities that allegedly include embedded backdoors capable of identifying users linked to China. The ban ...
The workplace ban, starting July 10, lands weeks after Anthropic accused operators linked to Alibaba’s Qwen lab of running the largest known distillation campaign against Claude. Alibaba will bar its ...
Anthropic's Claude Code has tool that can help identify China-linked users Anthropic has accused Alibaba of illicitly extracting its AI model capabilities U.S. and China locked in frantic race to ...
Most browser automation runs from the outside. Playwright, Puppeteer, Selenium, and browser-use all drive a browser from an external process. They read the page through screenshots or the Chrome ...
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and its United States-based payment processor AUS Merchant Services is ready to pay $600 million to resolve federal allegations that they failed to prevent merchants ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. The Chinese tech giant Alibaba will pay $600 million to resolve a dispute with the U.S. government over ...
Alibaba Group 99880.47%increase; up pointing triangle and a U.S.-based payment processor agreed to pay $600 million to resolve allegations from the Justice Department that they allowed merchants to ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Chinese tech giant Alibaba will pay $600 million to resolve a dispute with the U.S. government over allegations that the Hangzhou-based firm sold and imported illegal ...