Anthropic nuked a company’s access to Claude, stopping 60 employees dead in their tracks — support via Google Form is the only recourse for vague usage policy v

Anthropic nuked a company's access to Claude, stopping 60 employees dead in their tracks — support via Google Form is the only recourse for vague usage policy v

The situation was covered across many outlets and generated quite the blowback for the Claude creators. The move sparked public outcry, and Molina thankfully had Belo's access restored after 15 hours, but there's no telling whether that happened by Anthropic's own volition, or due to the bad PR generated.

You may like Claude Code deletes developers' production setup, including its database and snapshots Anthropic refuses to lower AI guardrails for The Pentagon OpenAI strikes deal with Pentagon following Claude blacklisting A cursory look at comments on the original X thread and on other locations seem to indicate that Anthropic's modus operandi is to shoot first and ask questions never, with many users claiming they'd been filling the aforementioned Google Form for months now to no avail. After the service was restored, the only apparent justification was that it had been a false positive, likely by some automated system that Anthropic uses.

@claudeai you took down our entire organization with 60+ accounts belonging to a legitimate company for no apparent reason, without any explanations. The only way to appeal the decision is by filling out a Google Form? Very bad UX and customer service. pic.twitter.com/lV4IXiI3B5 April 17, 2026

For his part, Molina sees this as the lesson to "never put all your eggs in one basket." Many commenters were quick to point out that he should never have coupled his company so closely with Claude to begin with, a reasonable critique by itself. However, it's worth noting that the story could have easily been the same if it had instead been Amazon Web Services, Azure, or an authentication provider like Okta.

Many users suggested that Molina would have been better off at running his own models locally, of which there are plenty, like OpenClaw. That's not as easy a sell as it seems, given it involves running your own infrastructure, plus the fact that Claude is seemingly head and shoulders above the competition, at least in the programming and automation areas. Even still, the old adage of "better safe than sorry" comes up, plus even open-source models are getting pretty darn competent these days.

Some commenters pointed out that having one sole provider for anything is a supply chain risk, and suggested to always keep more than one AI service active and running, even if it involves partially or completely duplicating work. As with mostly any big tech company, customers are at the mercy of their whims, should they want take the service down for whichever reason.

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