OpenAI to unveil GPT-5.6 on Thursday after delaying launch

July 8 (Reuters) – OpenAI will publicly launch its most capable model, GPT‑5.6, on Thursday, after delaying the launch last month on the U.S. government’s request amid national security concerns that powerful ​AI systems could be misused.
This comes on the heels of the U.S. government lifting curbs ​on Anthropic’s latest Fable and Mythos AI models last week, less than ⁠three weeks after the company was ordered to suspend their access over national security ​risks.
Washington has increased scrutiny of advanced AI model releases to identify potential threats on concerns that ​the technology could be misused by military or intelligence in China, Russia or other countries of concern.
Axios, which broke the news on the OpenAI launch, reported citing a source familiar with the matter, that ​the U.S. Department of Commerce had approved a broad launch of GPT-5.6, following additional government ​testing under Washington’s new oversight framework for frontier AI.
OpenAI had limited the model’s access to a small ‌group ⁠of vetted partners whose details were shared with the authorities.
The tech firm now plans to launch GPT-5.6 Sol, along with Terra and Luna models, OpenAI said in a post on X late on Tuesday.
Sol is OpenAI’s most advanced model yet, while Terra is the mid-tier lower-cost ​model and Luna ​is the most cost-efficient ⁠option.
The White House and the U.S. Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment outside regular business ​hours.
Increased scrutiny of AI models began with U.S. President Donald Trump signing ​an executive ⁠order establishing a voluntary framework for AI developers to offer “covered frontier models” to the U.S. government for up to 30 days before releasing them to trusted partners.
Anthropic has warned that it ⁠was “probably impossible” ​to make any AI model fully robust to jailbreaks ​and noted the potential for the development of a universal jailbreak that would be able to unblock “an entire class ​of harmful behaviors.”

Reporting by Devika Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Mrigank Dhaniwala.

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