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Respectability Dates Hardest

Gail Elliott walks a Dalmatian down a sunlit street in a black-and-white windowpane blazer, nipped at the waist, over a fine pinstripe shirtdress. The dog matches the check. Above her sits the JAEGER wordmark; below, a line of small type tells American readers to call 1-800-7-JAEGER for their nearest store. That was the March 1992 page in American Vogue, a near perfect specimen of a certain kind of clothes: expensive, correct, and already, even then, faintly behind the times.

To understand why it reads the way it does, you have to go back further than most fashion houses would like you to. Jaeger started in 1884, not as a fashion label but as Dr Jaeger's Sanitary Woollen System Co Ltd. The founder, Lewis Tomalin, had translated the work of a German zoologist, Gustav Jaeger, who argued that wearing animal fibres next to the skin was healthier than cotton. So the brand began as a wellness theory wearing a coat. People bought the long johns; George Bernard Shaw was a fan, and Ernest Shackleton took the wool to the Antarctic. The first Royal Warrant arrived by 1910, the first camel-hair coat in 1919.

The shift from health to fashion came in the late 1920s, when Jaeger started selling coordinated separates you could mix and match. That instinct never left it. The Regent Street flagship opened in 1935, Jean Muir cut her teeth on the Young Jaeger line in the late fifties, and for decades the name carried a settled, twinset-and-pearls respectability: good wool, good tailoring, nothing that frightened the horses.

All of which is the pitch in that plaid blazer and its matching dog: you have arrived somewhere and you intend to stay. The styling is aspirational in the most literal sense, a tidy life on a good street with a well-behaved animal, and the tailoring underwrites it, matched and safe and entirely sure of itself. It is selling permanence and propriety, the same thing the house had pushed in one form or another since the long johns.

Here is the paradox that explains why it looks old now. Clothes built to be timeless date hardest, because timelessness is itself a period style. Every era has its own idea of what "classic" means, and that idea ages exactly like everything else, only with less of a fight. The slightly oversized power blazer, the windowpane check, the safe neutrals all read as 1992 to me now precisely because they were chosen to read as nothing in particular. A garment that takes a risk at least dates to a moment you can love. A garment engineered for good taste dates to a committee.

It did not help that the competition had moved. By the early 1990s Jaeger was losing its grip, and the usual explanation is brutal in its simplicity: the customer base was ageing with the brand, and no younger woman was queuing up to replace her. Meanwhile the European labels that flooded in during the 1980s looked far more current. Escada under Margaretha Ley was selling loud, confident maximalism; MaxMara owned the coat. Next to that, Jaeger's quiet good behaviour started to feel less like restraint and more like absence. The house knew it, picking up a British Fashion Award in 1996 and bringing in Bella Freud to drag the image forward with a miniskirt and a bomber jacket. When a brand has to bolt youth onto itself like that, the youth reads as a costume, and none of it stuck. Jaeger fell into administration in 2020 and was bought by Marks & Spencer the following January for a few million pounds.

I want to be fair to the clothes, though. The camel coat is still a good camel coat, and the wool was genuinely better than almost anything you can buy at the price now. The problem was never quality. It was that Jaeger kept dressing a woman the culture had stopped picturing, and did it beautifully, right up to the end. The Dalmatian, at least, has aged fine.

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Selling Forever in Black and White

I bought my first bottle of Eternity because of a magazine page. The September 1988 issue of American Vogue carried the launch advertisement, and I went back to it more than once before I ever smelled the thing. That doesn't usually happen with fragrance, where the bottle and the marketing tend to arrive together at the counter. This time the picture did the work first, and the scent had to live up to it.

What Calvin Klein understood, better than almost anyone selling perfume in the 1980s, was that the advertisement is the product. The liquid is real, but the fantasy is what crosses the register. Eternity launched on roughly an $18 million campaign and pulled in more than $35 million in its first year, numbers that only make sense if you accept that people were buying a feeling and the bottle came along as proof of purchase. The feeling, in this case, was permanence.

That word matters because of what came before it. In 1985 the same house had released Obsession, and the campaign for it was all heat and excess: tangled limbs, bodies stacked together, an atmosphere of appetite with no particular object. It sold beautifully and it suited the moment, the early-decade sense that desire was a thing you accumulated. I still have a soft spot for the original Obsession, and I've written before about hunting down a vintage bottle. But by 1988 the cultural weather had turned. The AIDS crisis had rewritten what sex meant in public, and the unbothered hedonism that made Obsession feel current suddenly looked reckless. Permanence, fidelity, one person you came home to: those were not just personal values anymore, they were the safe harbour the decade had started reaching for.

Eternity caught that turn exactly. Where Obsession was a crowd, Eternity was a couple. The launch image, shot by Bruce Weber on Martha's Vineyard, gives you two people and nothing else. A man lying back with his eyes half closed, a woman folded over him, her hand pressed flat against his cheek, the whole thing in a grain of black and white that reads less like an advertisement than like a photograph someone kept. The woman is Christy Turlington, and the picture did as much for her as it did for the perfume. There's a wedding band visible. Weber, who had shot Klein's underwear work earlier in the decade, knew how to make wholesomeness look like charisma rather than restraint, and that's the trick of the image: it's chaste and it's still charged.

The casting tells you everything about the strategy. Obsession floated free of faces; you couldn't have named the people in it if you tried. Eternity gave you one woman, returned to again and again, until Turlington and the fragrance were nearly the same idea. That is monogamy as a marketing structure.

By 1992 the campaign had pushed that idea one generation on. Same grain of black and white, same Turlington, but the second figure is now a small child reaching up with his hand against her cheek, the exact gesture from the launch image turned around so the hand belongs to a son rather than a lover. The couple had become a family, and the permanence Eternity was selling widened quietly from fidelity into something closer to lineage.

Then there's the smell, which I'd argue is the most underrated part of the whole project. Sophia Grojsman composed it, and she built something that behaves like the photograph: clean, green, lit from a cool angle. It opens crisp and floral and settles into something soft and slightly powdery, never loud, never the room-filling sillage that Obsession used like a weapon. People called it a green floral and credited it with launching a whole run of them through the early 1990s. What I remember is how legible it was. You could smell it on someone across a table and know exactly what it was, the way you can recognise a face, nothing about it reaching out to grab you first.

I think that legibility is why it has stayed with me. Obsession was a fragrance you wore to be a certain kind of person for an evening. Eternity was one you wore to be yourself, only slightly clearer. There's a quietness to it that felt almost radical in 1988, when so much else in the culture was still turned up to maximum. Klein offered the opposite of the decade's loud register, and it landed because plenty of people had quietly been ready for the change.

The brand has gone back to the well repeatedly since. Turlington herself returned for the campaign in 2020 and again a couple of years later, both times alongside her actual husband, which closes a strange little loop: the woman who once modelled the idea of a lasting marriage now modelling an actual one, decades on.

I don't wear it now, and I'm not sure the current formulation is quite the one I remember; reformulations have a way of sanding the corners off. But the page from that September issue is still vivid to me in a way most advertising isn't, and I'm fairly sure that's because it asked for something closer to belief than attention.

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What Was in the Box

The April 1990 issue of American Vogue carried a Hermès page worth stopping on: Linda Evangelista down on the floor in a butterfly-print silk dress, propped on one arm, a small orange box cupped in her free hand. The line above her read "Hermès on the rocks." She isn't going anywhere. That's the point of the picture. A woman in couture, mid-afternoon, with nothing to do and nowhere to be, holding something we never quite get to see inside.

The fantasy here is leisure more than it is any object. The dress costs what it costs, but what the page is really selling is a life with that kind of empty time in it, the time to lie on a floor in silk. Everything about the staging says the money question has already been settled, somewhere off-frame, by someone else.

Now set that against the country reading the magazine. In 1990 the median American family earned around $35,300 a year. Average hourly pay for most workers sat near $10 an hour, and gas was about a dollar a gallon, which tells you how far that wage had to stretch. Real purchasing power had been essentially flat since the early 1970s, so the typical household in April 1990 was not richer than its parents had been, just busier keeping level. The long 1980s expansion still looked intact that spring, but the cracks were there. The savings and loan crisis was unfolding into one of the most expensive bailouts in American history, credit was tightening, and consumer confidence had started to slip. The recession that the economists would later date to that July was already in the post.

So the box. We never learn what's in it, and it doesn't matter, because whatever little trinket was in the box Linda was holding, most women certainly could not afford it. A silk scarf ran to a couple of hundred dollars, two or three days of an average wage for a square of printed twill. The ad isn't blind to that gap. The gap is the product. Hermès wasn't trying to convince the average reader she could join this woman on the floor. It was selling her ninety seconds of being her instead, turning the page into a small holiday from her own arithmetic.

That's the same trick Calvin Klein was running across town, where the advertisement is the product and the thing in the bottle just verifies the receipt. The difference is honesty of scale. Eternity at least sold you a feeling you could take to a counter. Hermès sold you a floor you would never lie down on, in a spring when most of its readers were doing the opposite of resting.

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An Empty Room Was Enough

A doorway opens in the basement of a furniture showroom, and on the far side is the backrooms: an endless grid of yellow-wallpapered offices under humming fluorescent light, corridors that lead nowhere and then fold back on themselves. If you've spent any time online in the last few years you already half-know this place. Kane Parsons built it as a teenager filming found-footage shorts in his bedroom, and the internet quietly decided his version was the definitive one. Now he's directed it as a feature for A24, and the dread that made those clips spread survives the jump to 110 minutes mostly intact.

Chiwetel Ejiofor plays Clark, who slips through the door. Renate Reinsve is Dr. Mary Kline, the therapist who goes looking for him. Parsons keeps the geometry deliberately broken, dead ends and objects half-swallowed by walls, closer to Escher than to architecture. When the film trusts that emptiness it's genuinely unnerving, and the cast holds the human thread together, Reinsve especially, who plays calm as a thin lid over something coming apart.

Most critics have responded to the restraint. The comparison that keeps surfacing is Annihilation, and it earns it: both films treat an impossible space less as a puzzle to be solved than as a thing that slowly rearranges whoever walks into it. Deep Focus Review called the debut remarkably assured, and Variety found it extraordinarily effective, with scores clustering high and the British site HeyUGuys handing it full marks.

My problem starts where the blood does. Almost everything terrifying here could have arrived in a PG-13 package, and that isn't a content-warning quibble. The backrooms work because they withhold. There's no monster you can name, no wound you can point at, just the wrongness of a space that should be safe and isn't. When the film reaches for graphic violence and a steady drip of profanity, it swaps that withholding for something far more ordinary, and the spell thins. Plugged In made the same complaint more bluntly, and they're right. Saint Maud understood this: it holds on one woman's certainty and never once steps outside it, and the horror is the airlessness. Backrooms knows it for an hour, then forgets.

The other honest caveat is narrative. There isn't much of one, and the film won't spoon-feed you lore. If you need a plot that resolves, the long stretches of wandering a liminal nowhere will test you. I didn't mind. The point was never the answer.

So you get an open-source internet myth, a thing that belonged to everyone and no one, somehow ending up on a cinema screen with Ejiofor in it and not curdling into a theme-park version of itself. Parsons trusted the room to do the work. Where he trusts it, this is one of the most unsettling things A24 has released all year; where he doesn't, it's a competent horror film with a knife. I'd have taken the whole thing a notch quieter.

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A Smell With No Flowers

M. John Harrison's The Course of the Heart opens with three Cambridge students performing a ritual on a hot May night, then refuses to tell you what it was. I'm only about fifty pages in, so I'm writing from inside that withholding rather than out the far side of it. The refusal already feels deliberate rather than coy. The characters can't remember either, which puts the reader and the people on the page in the same fog, and that seems to be the point.

Harrison is an odd writer to arrive at through fantasy, because he spent the 1970s and early 1980s building the Viriconium sequence and then walked away from it. He's talked about deciding to stop writing about people hitting each other over the head. What he turned toward instead has the furniture of the supernatural without the reassurance of it. His lineage runs through Arthur Machen and Charles Williams, writers for whom the uncanny was a moral and spiritual problem, not a special effect. You can feel that inheritance in how the early chapters handle Yaxley, the sorcerer who set the ritual going: not a robed magus but a seedy, faintly embarrassing presence, the kind of man you'd cross a damp street to avoid. It's the same trick T.E.D. Klein pulls in his slow, withholding horror, keeping the dread offstage and the people resolutely ordinary.

So far the book works by residue. The ritual is over before it's explained, and what remains are the things it left behind in each person. One character is plagued by visions. Another is convinced something small and malformed is following him. The narrator gets the strangest and most domestic affliction of all, an intermittent smell of roses, arriving with no flowers in the room. A monster you can point at; a smell you can't.

The theme I can feel forming, and I might be wrong this early, is escapism and what it costs. Unable to move on, one of the characters invents an elaborate private mythology, a lost European country called the Coeur, complete with forged histories, partly to comfort the other. I suspect Harrison is setting that consolation up to fail. A story you tell yourself to survive grief is still a story, and the cells decay on their own schedule regardless of how good the fiction is.

The sentences are the reason to stay. Harrison notices things at a pitch most novels can't sustain, a Manchester canal scattered with floating styrofoam, the precise social texture of two emotionally incompetent people failing to build a relationship. He's described his own writing as built on obsessive notetaking, and the discipline shows in the editing as much as the observation. He knows which details to keep.

The open question now is whether the Coeur holds, whether Harrison lets the characters keep their invented country or pulls it out from under them at the exact moment they need it most. The ground feels stable enough that I trust him to do whichever is worse.

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Denaka, 1989

There's a vodka advert from 1989 I can't look at without smelling Christmas, and I've never been able to explain why. A woman in a white blouse, big lacquered hair, leaning on a rail with a half-amused glance. "When I said vodka I meant Denaka." A bottle, two tumblers of ice, the flat confidence of the line at the bottom about a world of absolutes. Nothing about it says December. It just does.

Part of it is obvious once you say it out loud. Spirits advertised hardest in the winter issues, so this is exactly the kind of glossy page that arrived stuffed inside a magazine in the week before Christmas, the thick December number you read on the floor with the heating on. The paper had a particular smell. The light in the photo is warm and indoor and slightly too perfect, the light of a party that has either just ended or is about to, and you can't tell which.

What I can't get to the bottom of is why it sits uneasily rather than warmly. It isn't a happy memory exactly. It's closer to standing in a room you used to live in.

The critic Mark Fisher had a word for this that isn't nostalgia. In his book Ghosts of My Life he called it hauntology: you're haunted less by the past than by a future that got promised and then cancelled. He put the cancellation in the 1980s, the decade when a whole expectation of where things were heading was simply switched off. The advert is a relic of the confidence that came just before. It believed in absolutes, in clean lines and certain outcomes, in a drink that could be more definite than its rivals. That belief is the part that hasn't survived.

There's a smaller ghost inside the big one. The whole advert is a pun on Absolut, right down to "a world of absolutes," a brand defining itself entirely by the rival it was needling. Absolut went on to become the vodka everyone pictures. Denaka faded off the shelves. The woman is still leaning on the rail, still half-smiling at someone, perfectly preserved in a moment that has outlived the magazine, the season, and very nearly the product itself.

The picture is warm and the warmth has nowhere to go. It doesn't leave me nostalgic so much as homesick for a winter I'm not sure I actually had, sold to me on glossy paper by a company that wanted me to believe the future would arrive as clear and cold as a shot of vodka.

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Save the Buildings You Hated

The Chippendale top on Philip Johnson's tower at 550 Madison Avenue got laughed at for years. A skyscraper crowned with a broken pediment, like a grandfather clock scaled up to 647 feet. Plenty of critics called it a joke when it opened in 1984. Then in 2018 New York's Landmarks Preservation Commission made it the youngest building in the city to win protected status. The joke got a plaque.

That swing, from punchline to protected, is the whole story of 1980s architecture right now. The decade gave us postmodernism: color, ornament, columns that didn't hold anything up, facades that winked at you. After fifty years of modernist glass boxes insisting that decoration was a moral failing, the 80s decided buildings were allowed to be funny again. People hated it. They still kind of hate it. And that hatred is exactly why so much of it is in danger.

Here's the thing about preservation: taste runs about a generation behind. We never value the recent past until it's almost gone. Victorian buildings were torn down as gaudy junk before anyone thought to save them. Brutalism spent decades as a slur before the coffee-table books arrived. The 80s are sitting in that same window now, old enough to look dated, not yet old enough to look historic. It's the most dangerous moment a building can have.

The good news is that people are finally fighting for these things. Robert A.M. Stern, no fan of being asked about postmodernism anymore, published a list of fifteen "landmarks-in-waiting" and put that same tower near the top, arguing the country has no consistent way of protecting work from the late 20th century. In Chicago, Helmut Jahn's 1985 Thompson Center, a wild salmon-and-blue glass drum, landed on the National Trust's list of America's most endangered places in 2019. It looked doomed. Instead Google bought it in 2022 for $105 million and is renovating it rather than flattening it. Reoccupation is penciled in for 2027.

Not every case ends that well. Preservation advocates in New York keep a running "Po-Mo Watchlist" of threatened postmodern work, and the losses are real: the Takashimaya building got recladded, the South Street Seaport facade redone. Once a facade is gone it doesn't come back.

I'm not arguing every quirky 80s tower deserves a plaque. A lot of it was cynical, developer-driven stuff dressed up in cheap historical costume. But the best of it documents a genuine argument about what buildings are for, whether they should serve the street and the eye or just the spreadsheet. That argument is worth keeping around in physical form, not just in archives.

The buildings you find embarrassing are usually the ones about to vanish. By the time everyone agrees they're beautiful, half of them have already come down.

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Spice in an Aquatic Decade

The advertisement gives the game away before you smell anything: a man hides half his face behind an armful of white roses, the amber bottle glowing out of the dark beside a slab of gold lettering. Escada had built its name on women's clothes and women's perfume, the house not yet two decades old and run by Margaretha Ley and her husband Wolfgang. A men's scent in 1993 was a side bet, and it aged better than most of them.

Escada Pour Homme is an oriental, and an unapologetic one. It opens boozy and bright, cognac and citrus over lavender, then settles into a spice drawer: cinnamon, nutmeg, cardamom, caraway, a little carnation and geranium. The base is the warm standard of its decade, vanilla, sandalwood, tonka, patchouli and musk. People who wore it reach for the same words, sophisticated, professional, the thing you'd put on for a boardroom rather than a beach. It was loud, too, the kind of sillage that announced you halfway down a corridor.

The timing is the interesting part. By 1993 the masculine market was already sprinting in the other direction, toward the fresh, clean, faintly aquatic scents that would define the rest of the decade in the wake of Cool Water. Escada Pour Homme ignored the memo. It belongs to an older powerhouse lineage, the warm, spicy school of Tuscany per Uomo and Guerlain's Héritage, a world away from anything ozonic, a spicy oriental arriving just as spicy orientals were going out of style. Being out of step is a good part of why people remember it; there's very little like it being made now, and the people who loved it have nowhere else to go.

Which brings up the part that stings. Escada discontinued it, and the secondary market did what it does to a discontinued cult scent. A used 75ml bottle runs around $120 if you're patient. Sealed 100ml examples ask $200 and up, sometimes well past $250. For a fragrance that once sat on a department-store shelf as a mid-tier designer release, that's a strange afterlife: paying vintage-collector money for something that used to be unremarkable, bought by people who simply liked how it smelled.

That rose bouquet in the ad is an odd prop for a men's fragrance, melodramatic, almost mournful, a man apparently overcome by something. Maybe that was the point. The juice inside is warm and faintly nostalgic even when it was new, and the picture sells that exact feeling rather than anything you could actually bottle.

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Continuity Was the Product

Spare a thought for whoever signed the purchase order. Three days after Claude Fable 5 went on sale, the companies that had wired it into production watched it disappear, and the explanation they got was the same thin one Anthropic got: a government letter citing a jailbreak it would describe only out loud. The order barred foreign nationals from the model, and since no provider can sort its users by passport in real time, the only way to comply was to pull it for everyone. No transition window, no staged rollback. The model was the most capable thing on the public market on Thursday and a dead endpoint by Saturday.

Enterprises drew their lesson fast, and it should worry Anthropic more than the directive did. You can read it in the analyst notes, and it isn't "Anthropic let us down." It's that regulatory risk now belongs in vendor selection criteria, sitting right next to latency and price. Forbes put it that bluntly. That single sentence is a quiet catastrophe for any company whose whole pitch is "build your business on our model."

From the buyer's chair, whose fault the outage was never mattered much. What matters is whether the service answers on Monday, and Fable answered that badly on its first weekend alive.

The trust was fraying before Friday, too. The same launch quietly rewrote the data terms. Anthropic now requires 30-day retention on all Fable and Mythos traffic, across its own surfaces and third-party platforms, and that overrides existing zero-retention agreements. Forrester's read is stark: if your enterprise negotiated a zero-retention DPA, using a Mythos-class model voids it for that traffic, with no opt-out. Bitsight flagged the same change. So before the model vanished, the contract a buyer thought they had quietly stopped applying to the thing they were actually using.

The advice that followed more or less wrote itself. Build redundancy across multiple labs. Ask vendors point-blank about their regulatory exposure and continuity plans. Document which capabilities you genuinely depend on and line up fallbacks before you need them. None of that is new; model-retirement guides have preached it for years in the bored register of a fire-safety leaflet. What changed is that the abstraction grew teeth. "Single-vendor risk" used to mean a price hike, or a deprecated endpoint with six months' notice and a migration path. Now it means your most capable model can be gone by Friday evening over a secret nobody will show you.

The missing explanation is what makes it unbankable. A deprecation you can plan around. An outage you can engineer against with retries and a warm standby. What you can't price is a shutdown that arrives on verbal evidence of a "narrow, non-universal jailbreak" which, by Anthropic's own account, amounts to asking the model to read a codebase and point at the flaws, a trick already sitting inside GPT-5.5 and run every day by defenders. It was the exact category of attack Fable's safety design was built to absorb. If that's the bar, every capable model from every lab is one classified afternoon away from the same fate, and no clause in any contract can hedge a call made on a secret.

The cost of Friday isn't borne by Anthropic alone, though Anthropic will feel it first and hardest as the one currently holding the bag. It's a tax on the whole proposition of leaning a workflow on any single frontier model, from any lab inside a jurisdiction that has now shown it owns an off switch and will use it without showing its work. The firms that spread their bets kept running through the weekend. The ones who went all-in on the best thing available spent it writing incident reports and rehearsing apologies. "Pick the safest vendor" was never going to survive a week that fit a launch and a recall inside the same seven days.

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Washington Found an Off Switch

At 5:21 on Friday afternoon, Anthropic received a letter, and by that evening two of its models had vanished for everyone on the planet. Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5, gone. The instrument was an export-control directive, the kind of authority built to keep advanced chips and weapons designs out of hostile hands. This time the administration pointed it at a chatbot.

The directive bars foreign nationals from using either model, including Anthropic's own foreign staff inside the United States. On paper that sounds narrow. In practice a company cannot sort its users by passport in real time, so the only way to comply is to switch the models off for everybody. A rule written to stop technology crossing a border became a global kill switch, and it worked in a single afternoon.

The stated reason is thin. The government believes someone found a way to jailbreak Fable 5, and that is most of what we have been told, because the letter carried no technical specifics. Anthropic, which actually saw the demonstration, says the technique exposed a small, already-known software vulnerability, the precise category of flaw that Fable's safety design was built to catch, and nothing a person couldn't already coax out of GPT-5.5. That last detail is the tell. The exact capability the administration judged too dangerous for Fable, which Anthropic says it had deployed to hundreds of millions of people, sits right now, unrecalled, inside a competitor's product. One model dies over a weekend; its functional twin stays online. That is not how a government acts when it has found a weapon. It is how one acts when it has found a lever.

This is the first time Washington has forced a commercial AI product offline, and the manner of it should worry people who have never touched Anthropic. The whole thing took three days from launch to recall, ran on what the company describes as verbal evidence, and arrived with no published finding and no chance to contest the switch before it was thrown. Calling it disproportionate is too polite. A government that can erase a widely used service over a weekend, citing a secret it will not show anyone, has found a tool far more useful to it than any jailbreak.

The lesson most people are drawing is about resilience, about not leaning on a single vendor. That is sensible, and it misses the point. The dependency that failed on Friday was not on Anthropic. It was on an administration choosing not to use a power it turns out to hold. Export-control law hands the executive enormous discretion and almost no duty to explain itself, and it has now been aimed at software that ordinary people had open in a browser tab. The company that spent the spring asking for a verifiable brake on frontier AI just found out what a brake feels like when someone else holds it. The rest of us get to wonder which model the off switch finds next.

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