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Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst at Greyhound Research, said enterprises are dealing with vendor risk that their procurement frameworks were not designed to handle. “It means a vendor does not have a single legal status anymore. It can be restricted under one framework and protected under another, at the same time. That is a very different world from the one enterprise procurement teams are used to operating in,” he said.
The timing mismatch compounds the problem, Gogia said. “Legal processes move on their own timelines. Procurement cycles move on to another. Architecture decisions, once made, are not easy to reverse. When those timelines fall out of sync, you end up locked into dependencies that may no longer be viable,” he said.
‘Any lawful use’ shifts governance into the contract
The case has implications beyond Anthropic, Gogia said. The “any lawful use” standard the Pentagon sought to impose is one that the General Services Administration is separately moving to codify across federal AI procurement.


