---
title: "OpenAI Delays GPT 5.6 Launch After White House Warning"
date: 2026-06-26
author: "Barry Elad"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/openai-delays-gpt-5-6-launch-security-issues.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Artificial Intelligence"
    url: "/artificial-intelligence.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# OpenAI Delays GPT 5.6 Launch After White House Warning

OpenAI has reportedly postponed the broader launch of GPT 5.6 after the White House requested tighter controls over the release of the advanced AI model due to national security concerns.

## Quick Summary – TLDR:

- GPT 5.6 will initially launch through a limited preview program for approved partners.
- The White House reportedly asked OpenAI to restrict access because of the model’s advanced capabilities.
- The move follows government action against Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable AI models over cybersecurity concerns.
- The episode could shape how future frontier AI systems are released in the United States.

## What Happened?

OpenAI is reportedly delaying the wider release of **GPT 5.6** after the Trump administration asked the company to limit access to a small number of government approved customers. The request marks one of the strongest signs yet that Washington wants a more active role in overseeing advanced artificial intelligence systems before they reach the public.

According to reports, **OpenAI plans to make GPT 5.6 available** first through a restricted preview program, with a broader rollout expected a few weeks later if the government approval process moves ahead as planned.

> BREAKING: The Trump administration has asked OpenAI to delay the broader release of its upcoming powerful artificial intelligence GPT-5.6 model.  
>   
> The request came from the White House’s Office of the National Cyber Director and Office of Science and Technology Policy.  
>   
> The U.S.… [pic.twitter.com/iEI2mwjf2Q](https://t.co/iEI2mwjf2Q)
> 
> — Bull Theory (@BullTheoryio) [June 26, 2026](https://x.com/BullTheoryio/status/2070323456848351445?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 ## White House Seeks Tighter Control Over GPT 5.6

The Information first reported that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman informed employees during an internal meeting that the government would be **“approving access customer by customer”** during the preview period.

The request reportedly came from the **Office of the National Cyber Director** and the **Office of Science and Technology Policy**. Commerce Secretary **Howard Lutnick** also reportedly advised [OpenAI](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/openai-statistics/) against launching the model widely before cross agency approvals were in place.

Neither OpenAI nor the White House has publicly confirmed the arrangement. However, a White House official told CNN that the administration continues **“to collaborate with frontier AI labs to develop shared approaches for addressing the challenges of scaling this technology.”**

## Why GPT 5.6 Raised Security Concerns?

The government’s concerns appear to center on the model’s advanced capabilities, particularly in [cybersecurity](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/generative-ai-cybersecurity-threats/).

According to reports, officials believe GPT 5.6 is **on par** with Anthropic’s latest AI systems, Mythos and Fable. Those models recently drew attention in Washington because of their ability to identify software vulnerabilities and potentially navigate complex cyber attack chains with minimal human involvement.

Earlier this month, the Trump administration reportedly issued an [export control order](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/us-blocks-anthropic-fable-5-access-security-fears/) that led Anthropic to pull its most advanced models from broader access. The move highlighted growing fears that increasingly capable AI systems could be misused by malicious actors or foreign governments.

Cybersecurity experts have long argued that advanced AI presents both opportunities and risks. Systems capable of finding software flaws could help organizations strengthen security defenses, but the same capabilities could also be used to exploit weaknesses if safeguards are not in place.

## No Clear Rules for Frontier AI

The episode has also exposed the lack of a formal framework governing advanced AI releases in the United States.

President Donald Trump’s recent executive order encourages companies to voluntarily share frontier AI models with the government for cybersecurity review before public release. However, no official process has yet been established.

The result is growing confusion across the industry about who is responsible for overseeing advanced AI systems and what rules companies should follow.

Brad Carson, head of Public First, criticized the current approach, saying**:**

“

The Fable episode shows the need for clear regulations. Right now, you have an ad hoc, personalized, opaque, possibly lawless approach.

Brad CarsonHead – Public First





He added that government intervention may be necessary for dangerous technologies, but such actions should happen through transparent and fair processes.

## A New Era for AI Releases

If the reported arrangement moves forward, GPT 5.6 could become one of the first frontier AI models to undergo a government supervised preview before a wider public launch.

The decision may also set a precedent for other leading AI companies. Instead of rapidly releasing powerful new systems to millions of users, developers may increasingly face government scrutiny and phased rollouts when their technologies raise national security concerns.

## SQ Magazine Takeaway

I think this story marks a major turning point for the AI industry. For years, technology companies largely decided when and how to release their most advanced systems. Now, governments are stepping in because these models are becoming powerful enough to affect cybersecurity and national security. The bigger question is whether policymakers can create clear rules that protect society without slowing down innovation.