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The Anthropic logo is displayed on the screen of a smartphone with the company's branding in the background.

AI

Anthropic’s newest ad is creeping people out

Lucas Ropek

Anthropic is known for its creative marketing, but the AI company may have been a little bit too creative when it conjured up its most recent advertisement.

Titled “There’s hope in hard questions,” the company’s latest ad has been unsettling viewers with its weird imagery and doomer-ist tone.

The ad begins with a video of a burning house (not exactly a heartwarming start) before pivoting to a series of still images. These images include a crowd of people being surveilled by facial recognition, a homeless person sleeping on the street, rows upon rows of tombstones in a cemetery, and what appears to be a group of laborers toiling in a mine where (presumably) raw materials for smartphones are being dug up.

Meanwhile, a voice-over track features different people asking questions like “Can AI be trusted?” and “Who’s gonna hit the brakes if we need to?”

In short: Not exactly the family-friendly crowd-pleaser of the year. At the same time, it’s also not particularly far afield from the company’s past messaging. Anthropic has consistently attempted to depict itself as the ethical foil to other AI companies. This latest marketing stunt — which leans into criticism of AI as a way to make Anthropic seem aware of (and therefore distinctly worthy of) the responsibility it carries — would appear to be more of the same.

Not everybody is having it, however.

Sam Altman — the CEO of OpenAI, Anthropic’s chief rival — kicked off the criticism with some pithy trolling.  “i thought this was satire, kept looking for the handle to be spelled c1audeai or something,” Altman posted to X on Monday.

posted to X on Monday

Other skeptics — many of whom seem to work in the tech industry — came out of the woodwork to remark upon Anthropic’s odd choice of imagery and tone.

“Anthropic is quite an amazing company. With the worst corporate communications ever,” another person said.

another person said

“[T]he EAs [effective altruists] at anthropic really must be living in a bubble of ai psychosis to think this would go down well,” a critical poster remarked.

poster remarked

As some have pointed out, Anthropic is following a very time-tested marketing playbook here. That playbook involves a brand calling out and owning the harms caused by its industry as a way to demonstrate that it is the company best positioned to avoid or correct those harms.

some have pointed out

But even if it’s a familiar playbook, it seems to have backfired here — particularly the decision to include a brief shot that appears to be from Arlington National Cemetery. “I can’t stress enough how fucked up it is that Anthropic is running an ad that includes this image asking ‘Who’s gonna hit the brakes if we need to?’” said one commenter, sharing the cemetery image that appears in the ad.

sharing the

People kept coming back to the graveyard imagery. “Out of everything in that ad, this part was exceptionally weird and sinister,” another person wrote, sharing the same image.

another person wrote

Personally, the ad vaguely reminds me of the propaganda sequence in “The Parallax View” — the 1970s paranoid thriller about an evil corporation involved in an MK-Ultra-esque conspiracy to create brainwashed assassins. This is probably not the best association to have for a company that would like to prove it is acting as a force for good in the world.

propaganda sequence

Anthropic’s marketing has made a splash before. In February, during the Super Bowl, the company unleashed a slew of ads that humorously took aim at OpenAI’s decision to include ads in ChatGPT. Those ads earned it a good amount of positive buzz — as well as the smoldering rage of its competitor.

a slew of ads

include ads in ChatGPT

good amount of positive buzz

smoldering rage

Topics

AI

Anthropic

OpenAI

sam altman

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

we may earn a small commission

Lucas Ropek

Senior Writer, TechCrunch

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