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U.S. Government Used Anthropic’s Mythos To Find Classified System Vulnerabilities Within Hours

The government participates in Project Glasswing, which gives vetted partners access to Mythos, the Anthropic model that has found more than 10,000 software vulnerabilities since April.

 

The U.S. government used Anthropic’s Mythos AI models to identify vulnerabilities in classified systems within hours, according to the Associated Press. It is the most sensitive disclosed application yet of Project Glasswing, Anthropic’s restricted program that gives vetted organizations access to its most powerful AI models to find software vulnerabilities before attackers do.

It is unclear whether the government used Mythos Preview, the original version launched in April, or Mythos 5, the latest version. The U.S. government suspended access to Mythos 5 on June 12 after citing a jailbreak identified in Fable 5, the consumer version of the same model, and halted access to both on security grounds.

Anthropic launched Project Glasswing, concurrently with Mythos, after determining that Mythos was too effective at finding vulnerabilities to release publicly. The company restricted access to a short list of vetted technology and cybersecurity companies, along with select government organizations. Partners found more than 10,000 high- and critical-severity software vulnerabilities in the program’s first weeks.

The government and Anthropic continue to work together despite the ongoing conflict between the parties. In March, the Department of Defense designated Anthropic a supply chain risk after Anthropic requested assurances its models would not be used for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. Anthropic challenged the designation in federal court and secured a temporary injunction. In June, the government separately ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 due to concerns about access by foreign nationals. Anthropic complied while publicly disputing the evidence behind the order. The lawsuit remains active.

The White House held direct talks with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei earlier this year about cybersecurity and shared AI priorities. Anthropic said it plans to expand Glasswing’s membership.

Clayton Rifkind

Clayton Rifkind is the Founder and Senior Editor of AI Risk Today. He also advises on content development for esgtoday.com, a leading source of ESG investment news and research for institutional investors and corporate leaders. He has 20+ years experience in B2B technology marketing, leading strategy and execution of go-to-market plans across software, enterprise platforms, and mobile applications. He also founded two marketing consultancies, advising startups and Fortune 1000 companies, including Autodesk, Intel, and Microsoft. Clayton began his career in the San Francisco advertising scene, working with brands such as Hewlett-Packard, Intel, Microsoft, Symantec, and Wells Fargo.

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