2026-04-06 20:52:47
People like to give OpenAI shit for having “open” in the name, but if we look at developer tooling and access to models, the company is actually more open than Anthropic. That contrast was highlighted when Anthropic accidentally leaked the source code to Claude Code.
TechCrunch reported on Anthropic’s attempt to unwind the mistake:
Anthropic issued a takedown notice under U.S. digital copyright law asking GitHub to take down repositories containing the offending code. According to GitHub’s records, the notice was executed against some 8,100 repositories — including legitimate forks of Anthropic’s own publicly released Claude Code repository, according to irate social media users whose code got blocked.
Anthropic walked some of that back, but their instinct is to tightly control AI with closed models and proprietary tools. You can see this not just in the reaction to the leak but also in how Claude subscriptions can’t be used with third-party tools like OpenClaw. That’s fine as long as Anthropic is one of several players. If they were ever to become dominant, though, I wouldn’t want them getting anywhere close to a monopoly on AI.
OpenAI’s Codex CLI is already open source. Tibo of the Codex team had fun in a tweet joking about this:
Whaaaa. Only realized now and apparently our repo was public since 11 months ago and noone told us?!
OpenAI’s philosophy leans toward broader access. They released open weight models like gpt-oss-120b, one of the largest open models from an American company. They hired Peter Steinberger, the creator of OpenClaw. They try to make ChatGPT’s free plan credible, no sign-in required.
How do we reconcile all of this? There is a feeling in the developer community that the Anthropic folks are the good guys. They’re the ones who care about safety. They’re the ones who don’t want ads. They’re the ones fighting the Pentagon.
If you look closer, though, it’s mostly a feeling. Anthropic is an enterprise software company with expensive models. I like Dario Amodei, but he has built a closed company that seems afraid of its own shadow.
Earlier this year in a speech at the AI Impact Summit in India, Sam Altman said something that caught my attention:
We can choose to either empower people, or concentrate power.
I get that some people are cynical about Sam. You could argue that OpenAI’s lead in AI and trying to build everything is itself a form of centralization. But I think he’s right, and it reveals what differentiates OpenAI and Anthropic.
For years I’ve worried about centralization on the web. AI risks concentrating even more power. If we hope that AI will improve people’s lives — democratizing access to intelligence, not making it a luxury only the wealthy can afford — then OpenAI, even with their occasional missteps, is actually the best chance of that happening.
2026-04-06 20:10:35
Artemis II is almost there:
The Orion spacecraft is now in the lunar sphere of influence, meaning the moon’s gravity has more pull on the vehicle than the Earth. At 1:46 p.m. ET, the crew will surpass the record for the farthest distance traveled from Earth by humans, which was set by the Apollo 13 mission at 248,655 statute miles from Earth.
🚀
2026-04-06 18:22:28
La Petite Ceinture du 12th arrondissement. Old abandoned rail line that circled Paris to connect separate train stations. 🚂
2026-04-06 02:23:08
Amazing photo of astronaut Christina Koch in silhouette, hair floating in zero gravity, looking back at Earth. 🚀
2026-04-06 01:35:56
In today’s update to Inkwell for Mac, there’s a new window for photos in blog posts. It’s particularly useful for Reading Recap thumbnails too, with a clickable permalink to visit the full post.
Simple, but I’m happy with how this turned out. Toolbar buttons, pinch to zoom, drag to scroll, etc.