Original title: Ben Bernanke appointed to Anthropic’s Long-Term Benefit Trust
Article
Anthropic has appointed Ben Bernanke, former Federal Reserve Chair and 2022 Nobel laureate, to its Long-Term Benefit Trust (LTBT), an independent body intended to help align advanced AI development with Anthropic’s public benefit mission. Bernanke’s background in macroeconomic crises and financial stability is seen as relevant to the trust’s focus on how AI affects labor markets and the broader economy. The LTBT is structured as an independent, non‑equity, non-profit-shareholding group that advises Anthropic’s leadership and can appoint board members, while not receiving incentives tied to company returns. The trust’s current members, including experts in global health, national security, law, policy, and economics, were emphasized as a check against narrow commercial incentives. Company leadership framed the appointment as a way to strengthen long-run risk and impact governance as AI’s economic effects become larger and more uncertain. In the related announcements around the same release, Anthropic also pointed readers to public Q&A and tools for users to reflect on Claude usage, reinforcing a broader effort at transparency and accountability, though reactions suggest skepticism about whether this scales from process to outcomes.
Commenters largely challenged the hire as symbolic, comparing it to recruiting high-profile figures to protect corporate image and pointing to perceived inconsistency with Anthropic’s behavior. One view argued that Bernanke’s government bailout legacy makes the appointment a signal of moral hazard and corporate entitlement rather than ethical governance. Another commenter linked historical crisis policy outcomes to concerns about inequality, arguing that an appointment of this type may do little for equitable AI benefits. Multiple readers expressed distrust of Anthropic’s safety posture, suggesting past conduct has undermined trust and made current messaging seem performative. Skeptical remarks also framed expected policy impact as minimal, with one questioning whether the new trustee would loosen or tighten AI safety. Overall, discussion leaned cautious to skeptical about whether institutional optics will change decisions in practice.