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Giấy phép số 4978/GP-TTĐT do Sở Thông tin và Truyền thông Hà Nội cấp ngày 14 tháng 10 năm 2019 / Giấy phép SĐ, BS GP ICP số 2107/GP-TTĐT do Sở TTTT Hà Nội cấp ngày 13/7/2022.
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According to a notice sent to customers, from noon on April 4, subscribers will no longer be able to use the Claude Code service’s allotment for third-party connectors, including the OpenClaw project. Instead, users will pay additional fees based on actual usage, billed separately from their existing subscription plan. Anthropic says this policy is currently being applied first to the OpenClaw project and will soon extend to all other third-party connectors. Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, explained on X that the company’s subscription plans were not designed for usage models of these third-party tools. He said Anthropic is deliberately managing growth to continue serving customers sustainably in the long term. The notice comes after Peter Steinberger, founder of the OpenClaw project, announced joining OpenAI, a direct competitor. Accordingly, the OpenClaw project will continue operating with support from OpenAI. Steinberger said he and OpenClaw board member Dave Morin had attempted to negotiate with Anthropic but could only delay a price increase by one week. Steinberger noted Anthropic copied some popular features into their closed system before blocking access to open-source projects. In response, Cherny affirmed that the Claude Code development team remains supportive of open source and that he had recently made technical adjustments to improve memory-cache efficiency for the OpenClaw project. He stressed that the new decision mainly stems from technical limitations and that Anthropic is taking steps to clarify policy with users, including refunds for cases of disagreement. In related news, OpenAI recently closed the Sora app and video-generation models to free up computing resources as part of an effort to attract software engineers and enterprises that rely on products like Claude Code.
Premium gym chains are entering a “golden era” that is ending or already in decline, as rising operating costs collide with shifting consumer preferences toward more flexible, community-based ways to exercise. Long-term memberships are shrinking, margins are pressured by higher rents and facility expenses, and competition from smaller, more personalized…