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# Federal Agency Ban Operationalization: Migration as Custody Event
Counterpose | CP-25 | March 2, 2026
A publication of Vega Commons Project, Inc.
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On March 2, 2026, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced the termination of all Anthropic products within the Treasury Department, including Claude. The announcement stated that "under President Trump no private company will ever dictate the terms of our national security." FHFA Director William Pulte simultaneously announced that his agency and U.S. mortgage agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were also terminating all Anthropic products.
These are the first cabinet-level and independent agency terminations to publicly operationalize the presidential directive issued in late February. The announcements convert an abstract government-wide ban into concrete institutional actions with downstream consequences for record custody, platform migration, and vendor relationships.
## From Directive to Execution
The distinction between a directive and its execution matters. Directives can be rescinded, narrowed, or left unenforced. Public agency announcements create institutional commitments that are harder to reverse. Each agency termination triggers a migration event, and migration events involve custody decisions (questions about who holds records, for how long, and under what conditions they can be compelled) that are typically made by IT operations teams under compressed timelines rather than by general counsel under governance review.
An AI interaction record, in this context, is the log of what a user asked an AI system, what the system responded, and any reasoning the system performed during the session. A custody surface is the set of such records that exists on identifiable infrastructure and can be reached through legal process. The federal government's use of Claude through a General Services Administration agreement that provisioned the platform across all three branches created a substantial corpus of these records on Anthropic's infrastructure.
## Three Custody Decisions in Every Migration
Each agency termination forces three decisions that are rarely made with governance deliberation.
The first is what happens to existing session logs on Anthropic's infrastructure. Terminating the vendor relationship does not automatically delete the records. Whether Anthropic retains, deletes, or transfers those records depends on the agreement terms and any legal holds in effect.
The second is what retention posture the replacement vendor operates under. If agencies migrate to a competitor, the replacement vendor's retention defaults become the new custody baseline. Independent academic analysis has documented that all major AI vendors retain consumer data by default.
The third is whether the migration itself creates new records. Data export, format conversion, and platform onboarding processes generate logs and metadata that constitute additional custody surfaces.
## Investor Exposure and Enterprise Cascade
Axios published a detailed analysis documenting that Anthropic had raised more than $60 billion from over 200 venture capital investors, with approximately half of that capital arriving in the month before the ban. The investor exposure is relevant because the enterprise cascade extends beyond government. Every general counsel at every company with federal procurement relationships will evaluate whether continued use of the affected vendor creates contracting risk. That evaluation is itself a governance event that produces records and triggers architecture decisions.
Axios also identified a hardware supply chain dimension. The Defense Department's supply chain risk designation language, taken at face value, would require Nvidia to sever its commercial relationship with Anthropic. Until the formal designation language is finalized, every company in Anthropic's supply chain must assess whether continued commercial activity creates federal contracting risk. If compute capacity is constrained by supply chain enforcement, the vendor's ability to maintain infrastructure, honor existing retention commitments, and manage data during wind-down is affected.
## Federal AI Log Corpus
The GSA agreement that made Claude available across the federal government means that the number of federal employees and contractors who used Claude products between the rollout and the March 2026 ban is not publicly reported, but the session logs from that usage period constitute a federal AI deliberation archive that exists on Anthropic's infrastructure regardless of the ban.
Those records are subject to FOIA requests, congressional subpoena, inspector general process, and litigation discovery. The ban does not answer who holds them, under what authority, for how long, or through what process they can be compelled. It introduces a new question: what happens to records held by a vendor that has been designated a supply chain risk by the same government that created those records.
## Political Coordination
David Sacks, serving as the White House AI and Crypto Czar, reposted the Treasury Secretary's termination announcement on March 2. The same official responsible for AI policy was simultaneously advancing cryptocurrency deregulation, a juxtaposition worth noting for the record. The administration's use of federal regulatory authority in response to a company's publicly stated governance positions is operationally difficult to reconcile with the "regulatory capture" framing that administration officials have applied to AI safety governance.
The question Signal 25 surfaces is whether platform migration under political pressure produces better or worse custody outcomes than the governance arrangements it displaces, and whether anyone involved in the migration is asking that question before making the decisions.
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## Sources
| Source | Date | Description | URL | |--------|------|-------------|-----| | Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (@SecScottBessent) | March 2, 2026 | X.com, Treasury termination announcement | | | Reuters (Ryan Patrick Jones) | March 2, 2026 | Wire confirmation | | | Axios (Dan Primack) | March 2, 2026 | $60B investor risk analysis, Nvidia supply chain chokepoint | | | FHFA Director William Pulte (@WilliamPulte) | March 2, 2026 | FHFA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac termination | | | Peter Girnus (@gothburz) | March 2, 2026 | OpenAI policy coordinator, charter context | |
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## Amendment Log
*No amendments to date.*
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The observations presented reflect analytical assessment of publicly available information and do not constitute legal, insurance, or investment advice. Counterpose maintains no formal relationship with any vendor, regulator, or standards body referenced in this publication.