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China’s Z.ai claims it can match Mythos on cybersecurity

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Why This Matters

China’s Zhipu AI has developed the GLM-5.2 model, which demonstrates capabilities in cybersecurity and bug detection comparable to US models like Mythos. This development narrows the gap in AI capabilities between China and the US, raising concerns over national security and AI misuse. The open-weight nature of GLM-5.2 further amplifies risks, as it can be accessed and utilized by anyone, including malicious actors.

Key Takeaways

is the Verge’s weekend editor. He’s covered the tech industry for over 18 years and knows a thing or two about synths.

China’s Zhipu AI (Z.ai) released its open-weight GLM-5.2, and some researchers have claimed that it matches Mythos in certain bug-finding and cybersecurity scenarios. While GLM lags behind models from Anthropic and OpenAI in other, more general tasks, it seems that China has dramatically reduced the gap in the capabilities between its models and those of the US.

This level of advancement is particularly concerning to the US government, which has worked to restrict China’s access to powerful models like Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable, as well as the hardware necessary to train and run them. The Trump administration views Mythos and other advanced AI models capable of identifying vulnerabilities as serious national security threats. Recently, OpenAI unveiled GPT-5.6, which has also raised concerns about its potential for misuse and has limited access to it.

Because GLM is an open-weight model, it can be downloaded and run by anyone on readily available hardware. That gives it great flexibility and allows power users deep access, but it also makes it ripe for abuse by bad actors who can run it with little oversight.