ai regulation, anthropic, artificial intelligence, jpmorgan, risk,

JPMorgan's Dimon calls advanced AI risks 'a real issue' as regulators weigh guardrails

Photorealistic photojournalistic image of a keynote speaker addressing a serious financial conference audience about artificial intelligence

JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon warned on Wednesday that the risks posed by advanced artificial-intelligence systems are "a real issue," adding a prominent Wall Street voice to warnings long raised by researchers.

Dimon pointed specifically to Anthropic's Mythos model as a source of concern, according to people familiar with his remarks, even as his own bank aggressively deploys AI across trading, risk and operations. The contrast highlights a widening debate inside corporate America over how fast powerful models should be released.

The comments arrive as regulators and international bodies weigh new oversight. United Nations experts have cautioned that uncontrolled AI could cause "catastrophic harm" and widen inequality, warning that the window for effective governance is closing. A recent Geneva dialogue reinforced calls for binding international rules.

Anthropic, one of the leading frontier labs, has positioned its models as safety-focused, yet the sheer capability of systems like Mythos has drawn scrutiny from executives who are both builders and buyers of the technology. Dimon's caution is notable given JPMorgan's status as a heavy AI adopter.

Policymakers in Washington and Brussels are drafting frameworks meant to balance innovation with safeguards, but progress has been uneven. Companies argue clarity is essential to invest confidently, while safety advocates warn that voluntary measures fall short as models grow more capable.

For now, the financial sector's embrace of AI shows little sign of slowing, even as its leaders flag the dangers. Dimon's remark captures the central tension: the same technology promising enormous productivity gains also carries hazards that its most sophisticated users say must not be ignored.

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