OpenAI has made GPT-5.6 publicly available after receiving approval from the Trump administration. The release ends weeks in which the model was restricted to a small group of government-vetted partners, CNBC reports.
The model family comes in three tiers. Sol is the flagship, Terra a lower-cost enterprise option, and Luna the fastest and cheapest.
OpenAI says Sol delivers 54% greater token efficiency on agentic coding tasks, putting it level with or ahead of rivals. Its strengths in coding, biology, and cybersecurity were exactly what drew federal scrutiny in the first place.
The review ran through the Commerce Department’s Center for AI Standards and Innovation. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross were involved, in what OpenAI described as a “collaborative back and forth”.
Sam Altman said OpenAI made “many changes” during the talks, and sent technical staff to Washington to answer the agency’s questions. This was the first US frontier model launched under a government-managed access list.
How a model ended up needing a permission slip
The gating was not routine. Washington had asked OpenAI to stagger the release because of the model’s advanced capabilities, echoing a wider push to vet powerful systems before they ship.
A recent Trump executive order asks AI firms to voluntarily give the government up to 30 days of pre-release access to models with advanced cyber abilities. GPT-5.6 became the first big test of that framework.
The precedent was set next door, at Anthropic. Its powerful Mythos and Fable 5 models were pulled offline over cyber-capability fears, and the company faced export controls that were only recently lifted.
A safety win, or a worrying precedent
Supporters see a responsible system working, since models that can find software flaws or aid bioweapon design warrant a hard look before public release. A collaborative review, on this reading, beats either reckless launches or outright bans.
Critics see something more uncomfortable, namely the executive branch deciding when a private company may ship a product. Altman himself reportedly told staff the government-curated access list was not a sustainable long-term approach.
The unease is sharpened by the vagueness of the rules. Microsoft’s Brad Smith has argued the US now regulates AI without clear, transparent rules, leaving companies to negotiate case by case.
For now, GPT-5.6 is out, and the framework held together on its first real run. Whether case-by-case clearance becomes the norm, or a friction founders eventually route around, is the question this launch leaves open.
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