NOW LET US – AI RAG SaaS Studio TP.HCM
NOW LET US
Digital Product Studio
Back to news
AI-FRONTIER...3 min read

‘Dangerous’ AI Models Are Coming No Matter What

Share
NOW LET US Article – ‘Dangerous’ AI Models Are Coming No Matter What

The US government's decision to force Anthropic to take down its advanced AI models, Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5, over national security concerns has sparked intense debate. Experts warn that such restrictions are only temporary fixes, as equivalent AI capabilities will inevitably become widely available in the near future.

Late last week, Anthropic took its new Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models offline following a United States government export-control directive barring “any foreign national” from using the services. The company has been in talks with the White House since Friday but has yet to secure an agreement that would allow it to reinstate the offerings.

Since Mythos debuted in April, Anthropic has claimed—and warned—that the model has advanced capabilities for not only finding software vulnerabilities to help defenders patch them, but also figuring out ways to exploit them that could be used by bad actors. Anthropic itself noted this double edged sword in its launch of Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5. “A great deal of advanced usage of AI models is dual use: the same queries that are beneficial in the hands of cybersecurity professionals and biology researchers could be dangerous if available to malicious actors,” the company wrote in a blog post last week.

With this in mind, the company initially released a version called Mythos Preview to a select consortium as part of a working group known as Project Glasswing. Mythos 5 was also privately released to this group last week, while Claude Fable 5, which is a Mythos-grade model, was released to the general public with specific blocks on its ability to give responses to questions about biology and cybersecurity.

Then, at the end of last week, the Trump administration moved to restrict both models because it believes that Fable 5’s guardrails can be disabled to allow full access to the Mythos 5 capabilities, allegedly making it a national security risk.

Experts say, though, that this institutional clash is simply delaying or masking a hard truth: Anthropic may be the tip of the spear in this moment, but AI capabilities in general and models from multiple companies and open-weight developers will almost certainly have similar capabilities to Mythos 5 in the near future—if they don't already.

“It's myopic in the extreme to think that no other competitors to Anthropic will develop similar capabilities to Mythos or even that they have not already done so,” says Tarah Wheeler, chief security officer of the specialized cybersecurity consulting firm TPO Group. “There are other companies hot on Anthropic's heels who probably have the capabilities, too, and are holding them in reserve as they see how Anthropic is being treated in the current regulatory environment.”

Anthropic itself has emphasized this point since the launch of Mythos Preview. “The real message is that this is not about the model or Anthropic,” Logan Graham, the company's frontier red team lead, told WIRED when Mythos Preview launched in April. “We need to prepare now for a world where these capabilities are broadly available in 6, 12, 24 months.”

OpenAI, for example, also did a private release of a cybersecurity-focused model in mid-April and announced an expanded cybersecurity strategy.

Researchers note that even before this next generation of models, existing AI offerings could be used for advanced vulnerability-hunting and exploit development with a refined harness. A large group of cybersecurity leaders emphasized this to the administration in an open letter on Sunday, arguing that the White House's export-control directive was misguided.

“It's not one model; it's the general trend of technology,” says Bruce Schneier, a researcher at Harvard University and the University of Toronto who has been analyzing the situation. “Smaller, cheaper, open-source models, sometimes by themselves and sometimes in concert with each other, can match Mythos/Fable's performance with more sophisticated prompting. And we should expect other models to match Mythos/Fable's creativity and tenaciousness within months—slightly longer for open-source models.”

What the White House and governments around the world need to focus on, experts say, is democratically developing much broader and more transparent plans for how they will contend with advances in AI capabilities on cybersecurity and in other sensitive areas as they inevitably occur.

“The policy question is not whether a technology has risk,” says Chris Wysopal, cofounder of the cloud security firm Veracode. “The question is whether a specific restriction meaningfully reduces that risk or whether it mainly slows down the people trying to make systems safer.”

© 2026 Now Let Us. All rights reserved.

Source: Wired AI

Advertisement
Ad slot ready: 5887729102

More in this category

NOW LET US Related – Apple 2027 rumors: AirPods with cameras for AI and the second folding iPhone

ai-frontier

Apple 2027 rumors: AirPods with cameras for AI and the second folding iPhone

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has revealed Apple's ambitious hardware roadmap for 2027, featuring camera-equipped AirPods for AI visual context, a second-generation foldable iPhone, and a redesigned 20th-anniversary iPhone.

NOW LET US Related – Qualcomm’s latest chip hints that more powerful smart glasses could be on the way

ai-frontier

Qualcomm’s latest chip hints that more powerful smart glasses could be on the way

Smart glasses are still a nascent category, but chipmaker Qualcomm is hard at work upgrading the silicon to power the next wave of XR devices: the Snapdragon Reality Elite.

NOW LET US Related – My Father Wants to Age in Place. AI Will Be Watching

ai-frontier

My Father Wants to Age in Place. AI Will Be Watching

As more older adults choose to age in place, AI-powered monitoring devices like Sensi.ai are stepping in to ensure safety, raising complex questions about privacy and the 'dignity of risk'.

NOW LET US Related – SpaceX is officially buying Cursor for $60 billion

ai-frontier

SpaceX is officially buying Cursor for $60 billion

Just days after its massive IPO, SpaceX has announced a $60 billion acquisition of AI coding platform Cursor. The strategic move aims to help Elon Musk's conglomerate win over enterprise customers and close the gap with AI rivals like OpenAI and Anthropic.

NOW LET US Related – ‘Pretty Crazy’ Token Usage Is Testing Bosses’ Bet on AI

ai-frontier

‘Pretty Crazy’ Token Usage Is Testing Bosses’ Bet on AI

As companies integrate generative AI into daily workflows, the soaring cost of AI tokens—dubbed 'tokenomics'—is forcing executives to balance productivity gains against rising budgets.

NOW LET US Related – DOJ Lawyers Argue xAI Is ‘Vital’ for National Security in NAACP Lawsuit

ai-frontier

DOJ Lawyers Argue xAI Is ‘Vital’ for National Security in NAACP Lawsuit

The Department of Justice intervened in a lawsuit over xAI’s gas turbines, siding with Elon Musk's company and arguing that halting the turbines threatens national security as the military relies on the Grok AI model.

EXPLORE TOPICS

Discover All Categories

Deep dive into the specific technology sectors that matter most to you.