The White House has asked OpenAI to slow the rollout of its upcoming GPT 5.6 model, citing advanced capabilities that raise safety and cybersecurity concerns. The request marks the first time the U.S. government has preemptively asked an American AI company to restrict a model launch.

Early access will be limited to a small group of government-approved partners. If the restricted launch proves safe, OpenAI hopes to move to a broader release a couple of weeks later, according to Sam Altman.

Why the White House Stepped In

OpenAI’s new GPT 5.6 model triggered alarm in Washington and on Wall Street. TechCrunch reports the request came from the Trump administration’s Office of the National Cyber Director and Office of Science and Technology Policy, which said GPT 5.6 is “on par” with Anthropic’s Claude Mythos 5 in capability.

Federal officials worry the model’s advanced cybersecurity and code-generation abilities could enable cyberattacks or help bad actors develop malware. The move reflects a rare moment of pre-release government scrutiny in AI development.

What Approval Will Look Like

Rather than an outright ban, CNN reports the White House plan allows OpenAI to move forward, but with government checkpoints. Sam Altman told staff that during the preview period, the government will approve access customer by customer, reviewing use cases before granting access to the powerful model.

This gating mechanism has no precedent for a US AI company releasing a consumer-grade model. It signals a new era where Washington believes it must watch over frontier AI releases rather than trusting companies to self-regulate.

OpenAI’s Path Forward

Altman confirmed the company is cooperating with the government and expects to move to a broader, general release within weeks if the limited rollout goes smoothly. OpenAI has positioned itself as the most government-friendly AI company, with strong relationships in Washington.

For context on the broader AI policy landscape, see our coverage of AI competition and safety debates. The GPT 5.6 restriction is part of a wider conversation about how to govern frontier AI without stifling innovation.

What This Means for the AI Market

The precedent could reshape how Washington engages with AI launches going forward. If GPT 5.6 clears the review period, it may signal that government-approved releases are now a permanent feature of AI development. If it doesn’t, the reverse message will reverberate across Silicon Valley.

OpenAI’s willingness to accept constraints differentiates it from competitors who might resist government involvement. The company’s compliance could strengthen its relationship with regulators while raising questions about whether smaller AI startups will face the same scrutiny.

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