OpenAI publicly launches GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra and Luna on July 9 after 12 days of US government-gated access
OpenAI made its GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra and Luna models broadly available on July 9, ending a 12-day government-gated preview in which the US White House had requested restricted access; the rollout extends to ChatGPT, Codex and API users; TechTimes reports the gating process exposed OpenAI's nominally voluntary AI review framework as a de facto government preclearance system
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Summary
OpenAI publicly launched its GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra and Luna models on July 9, ending a 12-day government-gated preview during which the US White House had requested that access be restricted. The rollout extends to ChatGPT, Codex and API users, moving beyond an initial trusted-partner phase. The models had been announced in late June but held in restricted access at US government request since then. TechTimes, reporting after the launch went live, notes that the gating period revealed OpenAI's nominally voluntary AI review process as a de facto government preclearance system, and says questions remain about the model's safety evaluation record. The launch coincides with the expiry of usage caps on Anthropic's competing Fable 5 model.
The split
US fintech and financial media (PYMNTS, TechMyMoney) frame the launch straightforwardly as a commercial milestone. TechTimes provides the sharpest critical angle: the 12-day delay was not truly voluntary, and the process surfaced concerns about safety evaluations that have not been resolved. The feed has no non-US English coverage of this launch, suggesting international technology media response is still developing.
By the numbers
- 12 days, duration of the US government-requested gating period before public launch
- 3, GPT-5.6 model tiers released: Sol (flagship), Terra (mid), Luna (light)
- July 9, date of the full public rollout to ChatGPT, Codex and API users
Why it matters
The gating episode establishes a precedent in which the US government can delay the public release of a commercial AI model under a nominally voluntary framework, without formal legal authority. If that framework is now treated as a de facto preclearance requirement, future frontier model launches will involve a government review period, regardless of whether one is codified in law.
What to watch
- Whether Congress or the White House moves to formalise the AI preclearance process
- Safety evaluation disclosures from OpenAI about GPT-5.6's evaluation record
- Competitor model launches and whether they face similar government-requested delays
- International regulatory responses, particularly from the EU AI Office