Why Anthropic is On Track to Beat OpenAI to a Profit

为什么Anthropic有望在盈利上领先OpenAI

WSJ What’s News

2025-11-11

13 分钟
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A.M. Edition for Nov. 11. Anthropic's business-first strategy means the AI start-up is likely to turn a profit years before its consumer-focused rival, OpenAI. WSJ tech reporter Sam Schechner explains what this says about the path to success in the AI race. Plus, Congress has voted to end the longest government shutdown in history, with Democrats descending into infighting. And WSJ editor Bertrand Benoit details how Europe is facing a frightening new reality of hybrid attacks, putting the continent somewhere between war and peace. Caitlin McCabe hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • The bill to reopen the government now heads to the House as some Democrats turn on Chuck Schumer.

  • Plus,

  • we take a look at how AI startup Anthropic is poised to turn a profit more quickly than open AI.

  • And we explore Europe's unsettling new reality.

  • It's caught somewhere between war and peace.

  • We see a wave of sabotage acts and surveillance activity inspiring that seems to be targeting NATO members in Europe that are hard to explain other than as attempts to intimidate and divide and weaken.

  • It's Tuesday, November 11th.

  • I'm Caitlin McCabe for The Wall Street Journal and here is the AM edition of What's News,

  • the top headline and business stories moving your world today.

  • A spending package to reopen the government has officially passed the Senate,

  • paving the way for the longest shutdown in history to possibly end within the next few days.

  • The passage last night follows a dramatic procedural vote Sunday that saw eight members of the Democratic caucus break with their party and vote alongside Republicans.

  • This has been a very long road, quite literally the longest shutdown in history.

  • I am very, very happy to be able to say that we are coming to the end.

  • Republican Senator Majority Leader John Thune speaking there following the legislation's passage yesterday.

  • Attention now turns to the GOP controlled house,

  • which could vote on the measure as soon as Wednesday.

  • Here's Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson.

  • At the very moment that they do that final vote,

  • I will call all House members to return to Washington as quickly as possible.