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Claude AI is getting a new powerful tool that will affect human coders who are paid to review and find bugs before deploying.
Anthropic is bringing a new tool to help people review bugs in code.
Anthropic is taking on coders head on with a new tool called Code Review in Claude AI which basically does everything that most people hire engineers and coders for. The new feature or tool deploys AI agents who are prompted to review codes also known as Pull requests (PRs) and the company says it has already been using these AI agents internally for multiple reviews which have been designed to handle the load and give efficient results.
More Work For AI, What About The Coders?
Anthropic claims vibe coding has given rise to more work for coders and AI tools are being used not only to generate high lines of code but also edit them.
The higher volume of codes being submitted has prompted the company to build AI agents that can handle the review system and lighten the load for human reviewers, which has obviously brought concerns about human-level jobs being taken away by AI tools and agents. Reviewing codes allows companies to minimise extra work and spend less time identifying bugs and flaws now that AI can do that job much faster.
Anthropic says businesses can deploy Code review with the help of their IT admins who can enable the tool in the settings. They can individually select where the AI agent can review code and you don’t need to make any other changes.
Coders are obviously worried about the integration of these tools but the AI company suggests making use of these features will be costly and not likely to affect the usual demand in the industry.
Originally designed as a large language model for general-purpose tasks, Anthropic’s Claude has been adapted to military intelligence workflows and is helping commanders digest massive streams of data, prioritise targets, and speed critical decisions.
And one of the most striking examples of AI’s influence came during the opening phase of the Iran campaign, where US and Israeli forces reportedly identified and prioritised roughly 1,000 strike targets within the first 24 hours of operations.
California, USA
March 10, 2026, 13:53 IST
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