Anton Leicht argues frontier AI access is ending
Anton Leicht argued in a thread that access to frontier AI models is ending due to compute shortages, security controls, and limits on model distillation. The changes constrain middle powers, forcing reliance on uncertain U.S. licenses rather than open-source alternatives. The analysis stresses thin margins in competition and requirements for a minimum viable technology stack, with potential U.S. government support for aligned actors.
Anton is on point here, as always.
Policymakers and other strategists tend to implicitly assume a level of frontier AI abundance that I do not expect to materialize over the next few years. Scarce frontier AI profoundly changes the political economy of AI.
AI strategies everywhere hinge on widely available American frontier AI. Post-Mythos, amid compute crunches, security concerns and distillation crackdowns, that paradigm is under threat. Today, I argue the era of widespread access to frontier AI is almost over.
Anton offers a fairly bleak, very spiritually German outlook to "middle powers": you have lost forever, open source won't bail you out, your only hope is to submit and beg Americans for TOP frontier AI licenses; and then there's no guarantee you'll get any. It's realistic.
AI strategies everywhere hinge on widely available American frontier AI. Post-Mythos, amid compute crunches, security concerns and distillation crackdowns, that paradigm is under threat. Today, I argue the era of widespread access to frontier AI is almost over.
he has a very visceral understanding that Europeans are natural slaves who have no cards
What is going on with this website, why does Anton not have 20k followers. Tell you what tho, bet you the 2k following him are among the most interesting people on here. This is another banger of a piece. I hereby remind people that Anton has a PhD in Philosophy.
AI strategies everywhere hinge on widely available American frontier AI. Post-Mythos, amid compute crunches, security concerns and distillation crackdowns, that paradigm is under threat. Today, I argue the era of widespread access to frontier AI is almost over.

