Anthropic wants to develop its own drugs
TL;DR
Anthropic introduced Claude Science at The Briefing: AI for Science, pitching it as a workbench that brings fragmented tools, datasets, analysis, figures, and visuals into one environment for scientists. The bigger move: Anthropic says it wants to develop drugs of its own, with life sciences head Eric Kauderer-Abrams pointing to neglected diseases as an initial focus.
Nauti's Take
This sounds big, but it is still closer to a statement of intent than a breakthrough. Claude Science makes sense as a product for research teams because modern science often runs across poorly connected tools, databases, and analysis workflows.
Developing actual drugs is a different league: wet, expensive, slow, and brutally regulated. That is where useful AI separates from pitch-deck magic.
Briefingshow
Anthropic is moving from infrastructure toward owning part of the pharma value chain. That creates a strategic tension: it sells Claude to biotech and pharma customers while potentially pursuing its own candidates. The real bottleneck is less the model than data quality, lab validation, toxicity, clinical trials and capital.