World leaders have raised concerns over the U.S. administration's recent placement of export controls on Anthropic's frontier AI models, Mythos 5 and Fable 5, over national security concerns, Euronews reports. Suggesting this was a "wake-up call," moment, politicians and prominent figures in the UK, Canada, France, and the Netherlands, among others, said that frontier AI model access was now "critical infrastructure," and something that they desperately needed better control over.
Many of them didn't even point at America directly, merely saying that if governments around the world can block access to the latest AI technologies arbitrarily, then it was within their national security interests to find alternative solutions. That said, that likely means building their own national AI efforts, fragmenting the industry, and reducing reliance and dependence on U.S.-based companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic.
Although Reuters reports the heads of U.S. technology firms like Nvidia and Adobe have been in talks with the Trump administration in the hopes that it will reinstate access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5, arguing that the bans hamper cybersecurity defensive efforts, the damage already appears done. The trust that some have had in access to U.S. frontier models is gone.
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The Myth, the Fable, the Cautionary Tale
Anthropic debuted its 'game-changing' cybersecurity-focused AI model, Mythos, in April, claiming it was too dangerous to give the world wider access, but it brought in a few select companies and organizations under Project Glasswing to improve their code security. There was a lot of fearful marketing involved, but it was genuinely very good at finding flaws in old codebases. Anthropic suggested similarly capable models would be out in the wild within 18 months, so everyone needed to prepare.
But in early June, it widened access to Mythos to 150 global organizations, and then a few days after that, dropped Fable 5, a Mythos-grade AI model, but with additional safeguards to protect against it being used for nefarious cybersecurity tasks. Despite those would-be protections, the U.S. government quickly swooped in and shut it down, claiming it had been jailbroken and was too dangerous to have in the wild. It placed export controls on the model, and by June 12, it was offline and inaccessible.
On an individual level, the Claude subreddits have been filling up with programmers crossing their fingers that they'll be given access to Fable 5 again soon, but the more pronounced effect impacts global politics and national security.
Wake Up Call
Shutting down access to Fable and Mythos didn't just mess with programmer workflows. It shut down government and private projects all over the world, most of whom assumed that model access was all but guaranteed. Even if they didn't own the models, the free market would ensure they always had access to the best. But with the U.S. government's export block, that paradigm has shifted.
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