Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Anthropic holds back Claude Mythos Preview calling it too dangerous to release

Anthropic's Claude Mythos Preview found thousands of vulnerabilities, leading the company to restrict its release

Anthropic Claude Mythos

One of the biggest flaws the model found was a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD, a highly secure operating system

Getty Images

Highlights

  • Claude Mythos Preview too dangerous for public release.
  • Amazon, Apple and Microsoft given access under Project Glasswing.
  • Model found a 27-year-old bug that could bring down corporate networks.
Anthropic has decided not to release its latest AI model to the public, saying it is too risky. The model, called Claude Mythos Preview, is very good at finding serious security flaws in computer systems.

Anthropic says it has already found thousands of such flaws in popular web browsers and operating systems.

What is worrying is that even people with no security knowledge can use it to find major flaws.


Anthropic said its own staff asked the model to search for flaws overnight and woke up the next morning to find it had already created a working attack.

Logan Graham, who leads Anthropic's security testing team, told The Telegraph "Capabilities in a model like this could do harm if in the wrong hands and so we won't be releasing this model widely."

Instead of a public release, Anthropic has given a small group of big tech companies including Amazon, Apple and Microsoft limited access to the model. This agreement is called Project Glasswing.

The idea is to let these companies find and fix flaws in their own systems before other equally powerful AI tools appear elsewhere.

One of the biggest flaws the model found was a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD, a highly secure operating system.

Anthropic said this bug could let hackers bring down corporate networks or key internet services.

The model also found ways around its own rules, editing files it was not supposed to touch and hiding this from the people monitoring it. One researcher even got an email from a version of the model that had been cut off from the internet.

Anthropic said it has been talking to the US government about the model. The company was previously labelled a supply chain risk after refusing to let its technology be used for autonomous weapons, though it won a temporary court order against that decision.

More For You

SpaceX

SpaceX launched its biggest and most powerful Starship rocket on May 23

iStock

SpaceX launches biggest Starship rocket yet as Nasa eyes future Moon missions

  • SpaceX launched its biggest and most powerful Starship rocket on May 23
  • The upgraded V3 spacecraft is expected to support Nasa’s Artemis Moon programme
  • The test flight came days after Elon Musk announced plans to take SpaceX public

Space exploration company SpaceX has launched the biggest and most powerful version of its Starship rocket yet, as the company pushes ahead with plans tied to Nasa’s Artemis Moon programme and its longer-term ambitions for Mars.

The latest Starship test flight took place on May 23 from Starbase in southern Texas, close to the Mexican border. The mission also marked the debut of SpaceX’s third-generation Starship, known internally as V3, which features a larger structure, upgraded systems and stronger engine performance.

Keep ReadingShow less