Is Anthropic’s Agentic Artificial Intelligence (AI) Tool, Claude Cowork, Software’s DeepSeek Moment?


Since the debut of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, investors and analysts have been scratching their heads, trying to predict just how severely the spread of artificial intelligence (AI) systems could upend the world as we know it. The common view is that the disruption could be immense.

However, every bear and bull market typically needs a spark. AI itself has had many ups and downs, such as the emergence of China’s DeepSeek, an AI chatbot that rivaled ChatGPT and allegedly required only a fraction of the resources to develop and train. However, there is wide disagreement about how much DeepSeek actually spent to develop its chatbot, and AI stocks have bounced back from the plunge they experienced after it hit the scene. They have, though, experienced many ebbs and flows.

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Recently, the emergence of Anthropic’s Claude Cowork, an agentic AI tool, has led investors to dump shares of companies in the software sector, which not long ago was a market darling. Selling pressure has been intense. Is the arrival of Claude Cowork the software industry’s DeepSeek moment?

A person holding documents while looking at laptop.
Image source: Getty Images.

Claude is Anthropic’s AI chatbot, and it rivals ChatGPT in popularity. While the two have their differences — one being that Claude is viewed as the better chatbot for business work — they are largely seen as peers, with ChatGPT still having the edge in terms of weekly active users and valuation.

Recently, Claude introduced Cowork, an agentic AI tool that Anthropic believes will change the way people work and conduct their daily digital lives. Claude can execute non-coding tasks on your computer and within specific files. Using the Cowork desktop app, users can provide the tool with access to certain files and folders and then prompt Claude to complete tasks.

Now, it’s still early, but, according to its website, some of Cowork’s capabilities include creating a daily briefing that pulls from data from Slack, Notion, and GitHub; conducting research and analysis and create PowerPoint presentations and Excel workbooks; and aggregating customer feedback from a variety of data sources, including customer relationship management systems, transcripts, and more.

Cowork can also help manage legal documents by consolidating many lawsuit documents into a chronological set of exhibits. Several legal tech stocks sold off significantly once this capability came to light.



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