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Sam Altman throws shade at Anthropic’s cyber model, Mythos: ‘fear-based marketing’

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Why This Matters

Sam Altman of OpenAI criticizes Anthropic's use of fear-based marketing for its Mythos cybersecurity model, suggesting it aims to restrict AI access to an elite group. This exchange highlights ongoing industry debates over ethical marketing practices and the responsible development of powerful AI tools. The controversy underscores the importance of transparency and balanced communication in AI's growth and adoption.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

OpenAI and Anthropic continue to take swipes at each other. This week, during a podcast appearance, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman called out his competitor’s new cybersecurity model, noting that the company was using fear to make its product sound more impressive than it actually is.

Anthropic announced Mythos earlier this month, releasing the model to a small cohort of enterprise customers. The company has claimed that Mythos is too powerful to be released to the public out of concern that cybercriminals will weaponize it. Critics have said this rhetoric is overblown.

During an appearance on the podcast “Core Memory,” Altman implied that Anthropic’s “fear-based marketing” was a good way to keep AI in the hands of a small and exclusive elite. “There are people in the world who, for a long time, have wanted to keep AI in the hands of a smaller group of people,” he said. “You can justify that in a lot of different ways.”

“It is clearly incredible marketing to say, ‘We have built a bomb, we are about to drop it on your head. We will sell you a bomb shelter for $100 million,’” he added.

Fear-based marketing was not invented by Anthropic. Arguably, much of the AI industry has leveraged scare tactics and hyperbole to make its tools sound powerful. Ongoing rhetoric about how AI may lead to the end of the world hasn’t just come from luddite doomer activists; it has also come from the people selling this technology to the public—Altman included.