OpenAI has officially unveiled its highly anticipated next-generation artificial intelligence lineup, the GPT-5.6 family, but has heavily restricted its deployment under pressure from the U.S. government. In a Friday announcement, the company revealed three specialized versions of the architecture: the flagship GPT-5.6 Sol, the general-use GPT-5.6 Terra, and the high-efficiency GPT-5.6 Luna. However, instead of executing its planned wide commercial release, OpenAI has shifted to a limited, phased rollout at the explicit request of the Trump administration, restricting access exclusively to a small pool of pre-vetted “trusted partners.”
The sudden shift in distribution strategy underscores growing Washington friction over frontier AI capabilities. Agencies including the U.S. Treasury, the Commerce Department, and the White House’s Office of the National Cyber Director raised concerns that the model’s advanced proficiency in programming, biology, and automated reasoning could pose significant systemic risks. In an internal memo to staff, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman confirmed that the administration is currently vetting and approving corporate access on a customer-by-customer basis, with Amazon Bedrock slated to serve as one of the primary infrastructure pathways for the initial deployment group.
The government’s intervention comes on the heels of aggressive regulatory actions affecting other market leaders. Earlier this month, the Department of Commerce imposed sweeping export controls on Anthropic, prohibiting foreign nationals from accessing its state-of-the-art Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models due to jailbreak vulnerabilities. Because enforcing a nationality-based filter proved technically unfeasible, Anthropic was ultimately forced to suspend those models entirely. Eager to avoid a similar forced recall, OpenAI chose to cooperate with federal reviews, though the company publicly expressed deep reservations about the ad-hoc nature of the approval process.
“We do not believe that this type of government access process should become the long-term model,” OpenAI stated in an official release. “It keeps the best tools away from users, developers, businesses, cybersecurity experts, and international partners who need them.” While the company maintained that none of the GPT-5.6 models breached its internal “critical” risk thresholds, it acknowledged placing them in high-capability tiers for cybersecurity under its internal Preparedness Framework.
The current bottlenecks highlight a broader lack of formal regulatory infrastructure for frontier software deployments. While President Donald Trump signed an executive order earlier this month directing the creation of a voluntary 30-day pre-release review framework for advanced AI systems, those official guidelines have yet to be finalized. For now, OpenAI is working closely with the administration’s Center for AI Standards and Innovation to transition toward a transparent and repeatable approval pipeline, with the ultimate goal of unlocking broader public access to the GPT-5.6 ecosystem in the coming weeks.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute advice of any kind. Readers should conduct their own research before making any decisions.
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