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OpenAI postpones public release of GPT‑5.6, limiting access to pre‑approved customers after a Trump administration request, raising questions for AI rollout
OpenAI confirmed on Friday that it will hold back the public launch of its next‑gen model GPT‑5.6 at the request of the Trump White House, limiting initial access to a small, government‑approved customer set and pledging a broader rollout in the coming weeks [1].
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Model | GPT‑5.6 (Sol, Terra, Luna) |
| Delay | Public release postponed per White House request |
| Access | Limited to pre‑approved customers, then expanded |
| Timeline | OpenAI hopes broader availability “in the coming weeks” [1] |
OpenAI’s blog post frames the delay as a short‑term step to secure a “repeatable process for future model releases” while the administration drafts a cyber Executive Order framework [1]. The request follows President Trump’s recent executive order that obliges AI labs to share models with the government 30 days before a wider launch, though OpenAI says no formal voluntary process exists yet [1]. The White House also asked Anthropic to limit its advanced models two weeks earlier, creating an interim period where AI labs must coordinate releases with federal officials [1].
The move underscores a growing tension between rapid AI innovation and emerging cybersecurity concerns. OpenAI’s most capable variant, GPT‑5.6 Sol, reportedly outperforms prior models on benchmarks in cybersecurity, biology, and agentic tasks, and includes a “layered safeguard stack” to curb malicious use [1]. Yet the forced throttling could set a precedent for future government‑lab collaborations, potentially slowing the pace at which frontier AI reaches developers, enterprises, and global partners. Competitors such as Anthropic are already feeling pressure, having taken its most advanced models offline after an export‑control directive [1].
OpenAI’s temporary compliance highlights a clash between regulatory caution and the industry’s drive to democratize powerful AI tools, leaving the longer‑term balance between security oversight and open access unresolved.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 2 outlets · Jun 30, 2026 · How we report
OpenAI was founded on December 11, 2015, as a tax‑exempt non‑profit organization dedicated to advancing artificial general intelligence.
Microsoft provides Azure cloud infrastructure and has made multi‑billion‑dollar investments in OpenAI, supporting the development and deployment of large language models.
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The publishers allege that OpenAI and Microsoft used unlicensed, paywalled content to train AI models, resulting in lost advertising and subscription revenue for the news outlets.