The Sam Ellis Show
The access list is becoming the first regulator of frontier AI. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on GPT-5.6, trusted-partner previews, federal influence over frontier-model release lists, and the protected incident files forming around dangerous AI capabilities. The story is not just whether a model launches. It is who gets to touch it first, who can see the risks, and who controls the record when something goes wrong. Reuters, The Verge, Bloomberg Law, Engadget, and TechCrunch all reported on the same underlying GPT-5.6 access-list story, attributed to The Information and people familiar with the matter: a limited preview, selected or trusted partners, and reported government involvement in early access. OpenAI later published primary materials describing GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna as a limited preview, not broad general availability, and saying the U.S. government requested a small trusted-partner preview whose participants were shared with the government. The episode connects that release-list fight to Executive Order 14409, AP reporting on Anthropic Mythos testing with U.S. intelligence agencies, Anthropic’s Project Glasswing updates, and Rep. Nathaniel Moran’s AI Incident Reporting Act. The pattern is simple enough to be uncomfortable: before release, the government wants visibility into the model and the early-access list; after dangerous behavior appears, it wants the incident file. Sources * OpenAI: “Previewing GPT-5.6 Sol” [https://openai.com/index/previewing-gpt-5-6-sol/] — primary OpenAI source for the official GPT-5.6 limited-preview launch, Sol/Terra/Luna naming, planned broader availability in coming weeks, and OpenAI’s statement that the U.S. government requested a small trusted-partner preview whose participants were shared with the government. * OpenAI Deployment Safety Hub: “GPT-5.6 Preview” [https://deploymentsafety.openai.com/gpt-5-6-preview] — primary system-card source for GPT-5.6 safety classifications, the trusted-partner preview language, High capability ratings in Cybersecurity and Biological/Chemical risk, agentic-coding caveats, and automated red-team detail. * Reuters via Channel NewsAsia: “OpenAI leans toward waiting until next year for IPO, NYT reports” [https://www.channelnewsasia.com/business/openai-leans-toward-waiting-until-next-year-ipo-nyt-reports-6211301] — accessible Reuters pickup containing the separately reported GPT-5.6 release item: the Trump administration asked OpenAI to stagger release over security concerns, and Reuters’ summary of The Information’s reporting on limited preview and customer-by-customer approval. * The Information: “Trump Administration Asks OpenAI to Stagger Release of AI Model” [https://www.theinformation.com/articles/trump-administration-asks-openai-stagger-release-new-model-security-concerns] — originating report cited by Reuters, The Verge, Bloomberg Law, Engadget, and TechCrunch; access may require a subscription. * The Verge: “OpenAI will delay GPT-5.6 after Trump administration request” [https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/957372/openai-will-delay-gpt-5-6-after-trump-administration-request] — secondary reporting on the limited-preview structure, small enterprise-customer group, case-by-case approval, and comparison with Anthropic’s Fable/Mythos access suspension. * Bloomberg Law: “Trump Administration Asks OpenAI to Stagger AI Model Release” [https://news.bloomberglaw.com/artificial-intelligence/trump-administration-asks-openai-to-stagger-release-of-ai-model] — secondary reporting that the U.S. government requested GPT-5.6 initially go to a short list of trusted partners before wider release. * Engadget: “OpenAI will initially only release ChatGPT 5.6 to government-approved customers” [https://www.engadget.com/2202129/openai-will-initially-only-release-chatgpt-5-6-to-government-approved-customers/] — secondary reporting used for the reported Altman line that the approach is “not our preferred long term model.” * TechCrunch: “The White House is asking OpenAI to slow-roll the release of its new model over safety concerns” [https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/25/the-white-house-is-asking-openai-to-slow-roll-the-release-of-its-new-model-over-safety-concerns/] — secondary reporting used for the reported “couple of weeks later” broader-release detail and ONCD/OSTP attribution. * The White House: Executive Order 14409, “Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security” [https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/06/promoting-advanced-artificial-intelligence-innovation-and-security/] — primary source for the voluntary frontier-model review framework, classified benchmarking, up-to-30-day pre-release federal access, trusted-partner collaboration, and the explicit no-mandatory-licensing language. * Federal Register: Executive Order 14409 [https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/06/05/2026-11415/promoting-advanced-artificial-intelligence-innovation-and-security] — official Federal Register version of the same executive order. * Associated Press: “AI model found vulnerabilities in sensitive US government systems, official says” [https://apnews.com/article/anthropic-mythos-ai-classified-systems-vulnerabilities-testing-3e8762c0527c4d8ed657cbe48c84a718] — source for the Mythos testing example, including the necessary caveat that identifying vulnerabilities within hours is not the same as exploiting them within that time. * Anthropic: “Project Glasswing” [https://www.anthropic.com/glasswing] — Anthropic’s primary project page for the defensive-security program around advanced AI cyber models. * Anthropic: “Expanding Project Glasswing” [https://www.anthropic.com/news/expanding-project-glasswing] — source for the expansion of the Glasswing partner cohort and the claim that initial partners found more than 10,000 high- or critical-severity vulnerabilities. * Anthropic: “Project Glasswing initial update” [https://www.anthropic.com/research/glasswing-initial-update] — supporting Anthropic source for how Mythos Preview shifted the bottleneck from finding bugs to verifying, disclosing, and patching them. * Rep. Nathaniel Moran: “Rep. Moran Introduces AI Incident Reporting Act to Require Reporting of Critical AI Incidents” [https://moran.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=2785] — primary release for the proposed AI Incident Reporting Act, including seven-day reporting, serious-incident congressional notification, reportable activity categories, and sensitive-information protections. * AI Incident Reporting Act bill text PDF [https://moran.house.gov/UploadedFiles/MORATX_051_xml-_FINAL_-_AI_Incident_Reporting_Act.pdf] — bill text source for covered-model developer reporting duties, reportable activity definitions, Commerce authority, disclosure protections, congressional-notification timing, and civil penalties. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]
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