Elon Musk Slams Anthropic AI as ‘Evil’ After $380B Valuation
Anthropic should have been popping champagne. The AI startup recently announced a massive $30 billion funding round that reportedly values the company at roughly $380 billion, cementing its place among the most valuable private AI players in the world.
But instead of applause, the company got a public broadside from Elon Musk.
In a sharply worded post on X, the xAI founder accused Anthropic’s models of being “misanthropic and evil,” igniting yet another high-profile clash in the increasingly personal AI arms race.
The moment captures something bigger than a single spat: AI competition is no longer just about models and benchmarks. It is about ideology, branding, and who gets to define what “safe” or “fair” AI really means.
Musk’s criticism goes nuclear
The controversy erupted after Anthropic shared news of its funding milestone on X. Musk quickly responded with a post accusing the company’s Claude AI models of bias against certain demographic groups, including Whites, Asians, heterosexuals, and men.
He characterized the alleged bias as not just flawed but morally wrong.
The language was blunt, even by Musk’s standards. He also took aim at the company’s name, suggesting irony in “Anthropic,” a term rooted in humanity, while claiming its outputs undermine human interests. The post rapidly circulated, drawing strong reactions from supporters and critics alike.
This is not the first time Musk has criticized rival AI companies over bias or safety approaches. As the head of xAI, which developed the Grok chatbot, Musk has repeatedly framed his own AI efforts as more open or “truth-seeking.”
Public critiques of competitors fit neatly into that narrative, especially as the battle for enterprise clients and developer loyalty intensifies.
The bigger battle over AI values
Anthropic’s funding round signals enormous investor confidence.
The company has positioned itself as a safety-focused AI developer, emphasizing alignment research and responsible deployment. With billions in new capital, it is poised to expand further into enterprise markets and compete aggressively with OpenAI, Google, and others.
But the funding milestone also places a brighter spotlight on its models and policies. As valuations soar, scrutiny follows. Claims of bias, whether substantiated or not, become headline fuel in a market where trust is currency.
Musk’s attack highlights a growing divide in how AI leaders talk about safety and fairness. Some companies prioritize guardrails and content moderation as core features. Others argue that overly restrictive systems risk political or cultural skew. The tension between those philosophies is playing out in real time, and increasingly in public.
In the end, this feud is about more than one funding round or one social media post. It reflects a deeper struggle over who shapes the moral architecture of AI. In a field moving at breakneck speed, even celebratory announcements can become battlegrounds.
And as billions flow into the sector, expect the rhetoric to stay just as heated as the capital.
Related reading: Musk’s AI ambitions don’t stop at chatbots — he’s also pushing a bold vision for space-powered data centers.
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