Cutting Off OpenAI, Anthropic Acquires the Tool Provider Used by a Quarter of Global Developers

marsbitPubblicato 2026-05-21Pubblicato ultima volta 2026-05-21

Introduzione

Anthropic has acquired Stainless, a developer tool company that automatically generated official SDKs (Software Development Kits) for AI giants including OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, and Cloudflare. The deal, reportedly valued at around $300 million, marks a strategic shift for Anthropic as it builds its "AI agent" infrastructure. Stainless acted as a "translator," converting complex API specifications into ready-to-use code libraries for developers. Its tools indirectly reached about a quarter of professional software developers globally. Following the acquisition, Stainless will shut down its public products and its team will join Anthropic to focus on internal platform development, notably for the Claude Platform. Existing SDKs remain with their respective client companies but will no longer receive updates from Stainless. This move is part of Anthropic's broader 18-month strategy to assemble a complete "agent stack." The stack consists of the Claude model at its core, the newly acquired Stainless for standardized API interfaces, and the Model Context Protocol (MCP), an open standard for connecting agents to external tools and data. This contrasts with OpenAI's focus on model generations and consumer-scale compute. Anthropic believes an agent's ultimate utility depends on its ability to connect to external systems. By internalizing the SDK layer and promoting MCP as a connection standard, Anthropic aims to lock in long-term ecosystem advantages and create path dependency, m...

You may not have heard of Stainless, but if you've used the official SDKs of Claude, OpenAI, or Cloudflare, you've likely indirectly used code it generated.

Beyond OpenAI and Anthropic, Stainless's client list includes Meta, Groq, Runway, Cerebras, and others, covering nearly all the top players in AI infrastructure.

It acts as a "translator" between large models and developers: converting obscure API specifications into ready-to-use code libraries for developers.

Now, Anthropic has acquired Stainless, with both companies announcing the completion of the acquisition.

The Stainless founding team will join Anthropic, and Stainless will begin sunsetting its managed products, including the SDK generator.

This is not a simple tool company acquisition.

In its official blog post about acquiring Stainless, Anthropic mentioned that the upper limit of an agent's capabilities depends on how many external systems it can connect to: acquiring Stainless is about strengthening the agent's interfaces.

The AI frontier is shifting from models that can only answer questions to agents that can proactively execute tasks—and an agent's capabilities depend on the systems it can reach. Acquiring Stainless is precisely to expand this reach further.

If we place this acquisition within the context of Anthropic's actions over the past 18 months, the three-piece agent suite is now complete: Claude is the model, Stainless is the interface, and MCP is the connection.

The Company That Wrote SDKs for Multiple AI Giants Has Been Bought by Anthropic

Stainless was founded in New York in 2022 by Alex Rattray, who came from Stripe, where he led the redesign of the API documentation and personally built Stripe's SDK code generation system.

During user research, he discovered that developers never directly call API endpoints: for them, the SDK is the API itself.

This insight directly led him to later found Stainless, turning that capability into a product.

Stainless founder Alex Rattray

Developers feed it an OpenAPI specification, and it outputs official SDKs in Python, TypeScript, Go, Java, Ruby, and other languages.

The model company only needs to maintain one API description; Stainless handles all language versions, error handling, retry logic, documentation generation, and more.

OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Cloudflare, DocuSign, Square—these AI giants or software vendors are all Stainless clients.

Open the GitHub repository for OpenAI's official Python SDK, and the README states: "Generated by Stainless based on the OpenAPI specification."

Similarly, the header of any source file in the Anthropic SDK also states: "Automatically generated by Stainless from the OpenAPI specification."

This means that over the past few years, OpenAI and Anthropic, as rivals, have long used the same developer tool platform for their official SDK generation.

After the acquisition, Stainless founder Alex Rattray informed existing clients that all previously generated SDKs fully belong to the clients, who can modify and extend them independently, but Stainless will no longer provide subsequent support.

The Stainless team will continue working as an internal organization within Anthropic, focusing on building out Claude Platform capabilities and connecting agents to APIs.

https://www.stainless.com/blog/stainless-is-joining-anthropic/

This tool company's products indirectly reached about a quarter of professional software developers worldwide. On its first day joining Anthropic, it closed its doors to the entire industry: from a shared infrastructure to an internal department of Anthropic.

The Agent Three-Piece Suite Is Complete: Model, Interface, Connection

This acquisition is not an isolated event.

Placing the Stainless acquisition back on the strategic path Anthropic has taken over the past 18 months reveals a completed three-piece suite.

The foundational layer is the model.

From Claude 3.5 Sonnet all the way to Claude 4.7, programming and agent capabilities have been consistent differentiators for Anthropic. Claude Code has also become one of the most popular programming agents among developers this past year.

The middle layer is the interface.

Stainless's SDK auto-generation capability makes it possible for agents to call various APIs using a unified specification. This layer was previously outsourced; now it's brought in-house at Anthropic.

The top layer is the connection.

In November 2024, Anthropic open-sourced MCP (Model Context Protocol), standardizing how models connect to external data sources, tools, and file systems, so agents don't need to write separate adapters for every external service.

After MCP was open-sourced, OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Cursor, and Replit announced support. MCP is evolving into an agent connectivity standard.

And Stainless can directly generate an MCP server from an API specification. The model is the brain, the interface is the nerve endings, and the connection standard is the protocol that links them. Combined, these three pieces form a functional agent machine.

Katelyn Lesse, Head of Platform Engineering at Anthropic, stated plainly: "How useful an agent is depends on what it can connect to."

Stainless founder and CEO Alex Rattray said that Anthropic was one of the earliest teams to bet on Stainless, and "bringing the two teams together was an easy decision."

This acquisition is the final move in a strategic game that began 18 months ago.

Why Is an "SDK Translation Company" Worth $300 Million?

According to a previous report by The Information, the negotiation amount for this acquisition was at least $300 million. Anthropic has not disclosed the specific figure officially, but even this magnitude is enough to make people reevaluate the value of the SDK layer.

In the past, SDKs were an insignificant engineering problem.

The API was the model company's business; the SDK was just a "wrapper layer" translating the API into various programming languages. Model companies could write it themselves or outsource it to Stainless; no one cared.

But the agent era is different. When Claude or GPT acts as an agent to call third-party services, the SDK is no longer a "tool for humans to read" but an "interface for agents to use."

Whether an agent task succeeds largely depends on whether every API's SDK it calls is robust: is error handling complete? Is retry logic reasonable? Are parameter definitions strict? Are types inferable?

Any non-standard SDK can cause an agent to get stuck mid-task.

If the reported $300 million negotiation amount is accurate, what Anthropic sees is clearly not just an SDK generator, but the developer interface infrastructure layer between APIs and agents.

There's a subtler point: The official SDKs of companies like OpenAI, Meta, and Cloudflare were all previously generated by Stainless.

On the first day after the acquisition, with Stainless closing its doors externally, these companies face a practical problem: will they take over SDK maintenance themselves, or find another supplier?

So far, none have responded to this question.

OpenAI Doubles Down on Models, Anthropic Secures the Foundation

Looking back at the final ASI showdown between the two giants, OpenAI and Anthropic have distinct strategic focuses.

OpenAI's focus is on model generations and compute investment.

From GPT-5, GPT-5.4 to GPT-5.5 incremental updates, the Stargate project's massive compute procurement, ChatGPT's weekly active users growing from 400 million a year ago to 900 million—it concentrates resources on the consumer-facing entry point and the model itself.

Anthropic is taking a different path: enterprise agent infrastructure. Strengthening developer tools with Claude Code, standardizing the connection protocol with MCP, and now bringing the SDK layer in-house with Stainless.

The underlying logic of these two paths is completely different.

The model layer follows a logic of generational disruption: when the next generation arrives, the previous generation's advantages can vanish instantly. The gaps between generations are shrinking, windows are getting shorter, and can only be achieved through compute and data.

The infrastructure layer's logic is the opposite. Once established as a de facto standard, the compounding returns are long-term. With MCP now adopted industry-wide, each new adopter adds switching costs. Once the SDK layer is internalized within Anthropic, the entire agent ecosystem could develop a path dependency on Anthropic's interface specifications.

According to Digital Applied statistics, the number of public MCP servers grew from 1,200 in Q1 2025 to over 9,400 by April 2026, with 78% of enterprise AI teams deploying at least one MCP agent in production.

The gap in model capabilities is becoming easier to close.

Once this connection layer gateway is locked, it becomes very hard to bypass.

References:

https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-acquires-stainless

https://www.stainless.com/blog/stainless-is-joining-anthropic/

https://www.digitalapplied.com/blog/mcp-adoption-statistics-2026-model-context-protocol

This article is from the WeChat public account "AI Era", author: ASI Revelation

Domande pertinenti

QWhat is the main purpose of Stainless as described in the article, and why was it significant for AI companies?

AStainless acts as a 'translator' between complex API specifications and developers, automatically generating official SDKs in multiple programming languages. It was significant for AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic because it allowed them to maintain just one API description while Stainless handled all language versions, error handling, retry logic, and documentation, greatly simplifying developer integration.

QWhy did Anthropic acquire Stainless, according to the article's analysis of their strategic roadmap?

AAnthropic acquired Stainless to strengthen its 'agent' infrastructure. The article states that an agent's usefulness depends on what it can connect to. By bringing Stainless in-house, Anthropic gains control over the 'interface' layer—the SDKs that agents use to call APIs—completing its 'agent trifecta' of model (Claude), interface (Stainless), and connection protocol (MCP).

QWhat immediate impact does the acquisition have on Stainless's existing clients, such as OpenAI and Meta?

AThe acquisition means Stainless will begin winding down its hosted products, including the SDK generator. While existing clients retain full ownership of previously generated SDKs and can modify them, Stainless will no longer provide future support or updates. These companies must now decide whether to maintain the SDKs themselves or find an alternative supplier.

QHow does the article contrast the strategic focuses of OpenAI and Anthropic in the AI race?

AThe article contrasts their strategies: OpenAI focuses on model generation leaps and massive compute investment (e.g., GPT-5 series, Stargate project) to dominate the consumer-facing market. Anthropic focuses on building enterprise-grade agent infrastructure, strengthening developer tools (Claude Code), standardizing the connection protocol (MCP), and now internalizing the SDK layer (Stainless) to create long-term ecosystem lock-in.

QWhat is MCP, and why is its growth cited as important for Anthropic's strategy?

AMCP (Model Context Protocol) is an open-source protocol standardized by Anthropic for connecting AI models to external data sources, tools, and file systems. Its growth is important because it's becoming a de facto standard for agent connectivity. With a reported increase from 1,200 to over 9,400 public servers and widespread enterprise adoption, it creates network effects and switching costs, solidifying Anthropic's position in the agent infrastructure layer.

Letture associate

Why Did Zhipu Surge Nearly 30% in a Single Day?

"Global AI Model Unicorn" Zhipu's stock surged nearly 30% in a single day, reaching a new market cap high. The catalyst was the launch of its GLM-5.1-highspeed API, boasting a generation speed of **400 tokens per second**, setting a new global benchmark. This speed, roughly 3-5 times faster than industry leaders like OpenAI's GPT-4o and Anthropic's Claude, is achieved **without compromising the full-scale model's capabilities**. In the era of AI Agents requiring dozens of self-calls, such latency reduction is critical, transforming speed from a system metric into a determinant of intelligence limits. The breakthrough stems from a three-layer technical overhaul: 1. **TileRT Inference Engine**: Compiles the entire model into a continuous, always-on computation pipeline using "Warp Specialization," minimizing GPU idle time by having different processor groups handle data loading, computation, and communication in parallel. 2. **Heterogeneous Parallelism for MLA**: To efficiently run the GLM-5.1 model using the MLA attention mechanism, TileRT employs a heterogeneous strategy. One GPU handles sparse indexing/routing, while the others perform dense computation, optimizing for MLA's unique workflow. 3. **ZCube Network Architecture**: Replaces the standard Spine-Leaf (ROFT) network topology with a flat, dual-group interconnect. This design creates a single optimal path between any two GPUs, eliminating network congestion at scale and reducing latency. The business impact is significant: a 15% increase in cluster throughput (free extra capacity), a 40.6% reduction in tail latency (improved stability), and a one-third cut in networking hardware costs. Long-term, this innovation challenges the dominance of NVIDIA's integrated hardware-software stack (GPU+NVLink+InfiniBand), potentially benefiting manufacturers of high-density Leaf switches and optical modules while lowering the software barrier for domestic AI chips like Huawei's Ascend. The innovation proves that more can be achieved with the same compute, reshaping the infrastructure beyond just GPUs.

marsbit17 min fa

Why Did Zhipu Surge Nearly 30% in a Single Day?

marsbit17 min fa

Bidding Farewell to the 'Gray Gambling Game'! Polymarket Charges into the Compliance Track—How Will This Impact the Entire Crypto Industry?

From Gray to Regulated: How Polymarket’s Compliance Journey Reshapes Crypto The evolution of Polymarket, a decentralized prediction market platform, illustrates a critical trend in crypto: innovative, high-value sectors ultimately integrate into regulatory frameworks. Founded in 2020, Polymarket quickly gained traction by leveraging low-cost Layer 2 blockchain technology for event-based trading, notably during the 2024 US presidential election where its markets outperformed traditional polls. However, its "build first, comply later" approach led to a 2022 CFTC enforcement action, resulting in a $1.4 million fine and a ban from the US market. A pivotal shift occurred in 2025 under a new US administration. Polymarket strategically acquired CFTC-licensed derivatives exchange QCX for $112 million, securing a regulated pathway back into the US. This move coincided with a regulatory reversal, as the CFTC withdrew a prior proposal to ban political event contracts. The platform’s successful "regulatory acquisition" strategy, avoiding a lengthy independent licensing process, highlights a viable compliance path for crypto-native projects. Its journey from regulatory target to a CFTC-recognized entity—bolstered by a major data partnership and investment from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)—signals the maturation of prediction markets from a "crypto novelty" into acknowledged financial infrastructure. The story underscores that genuine utility provides negotiating power with regulators and that embracing compliance does not necessarily mean sacrificing core technological advantages.

marsbit34 min fa

Bidding Farewell to the 'Gray Gambling Game'! Polymarket Charges into the Compliance Track—How Will This Impact the Entire Crypto Industry?

marsbit34 min fa

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片