Close Menu
Daily Guardian
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
What's On

Montreal announces it will support interest-free rental loans for struggling tenants

June 29, 2026

Island Passage Accelerates toward Drilling at the EL02 Project Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea

June 29, 2026

Collision with transport truck sends 3 to hospital with serious injuries

June 29, 2026

Inuit leaders to meet Carney, ministers amid growing tensions over Arctic

June 29, 2026

Tidal won’t pay royalties on AI-generated music but isn’t banning it outright

June 29, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
Daily Guardian
Home » Anthropic’s Mythos breach was humiliating
Technology

Anthropic’s Mythos breach was humiliating

By News RoomApril 23, 20266 Mins Read
Anthropic’s Mythos breach was humiliating
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Anthropic’s tightly controlled rollout of Claude Mythos has taken an awkward turn. After spending weeks insisting the AI model is so capable at cybersecurity that it is too dangerous to release publicly, it appears the model fell into the wrong hands anyway.

According to Bloomberg, a “small group of unauthorized users” has had access to Mythos — whose existence was first revealed in a leak — since the day Anthropic announced plans to offer it to a select group of companies for testing. Anthropic says it is investigating. That’s a rough look for a company that has built its brand on taking AI safety seriously while touting the cybersecurity prowess of its latest model.

From a technological standpoint, the Mythos breach is embarrassingly unsophisticated. Bloomberg reports the group accessed Mythos by making “an educated guess about the model’s online location,” using information about Anthropic’s other models exposed in the breach of Mercor — a company that makes AI training data — along with access one member had through contract work evaluating Anthropic models. The group got unauthorized access to Mythos through a combination of insider knowledge and a lucky guess, not some sophisticated technological exploit or wholesale theft of the model.

Security vulnerabilities are inevitable, and it was Mercor, not Anthropic, that revealed the information the hackers used to guess Mythos’ location. Pia Hüsch, a research fellow at the British think tank Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), told me that no company is ever completely secure and humans are often the weakest link, though it “does initially seem a bit lucky” that there were no serious consequences.

Anthropic failed to anticipate an ‘entirely imaginable’ kind of failure

But it’s not entirely bad luck. These kinds of educated guesses are a very standard hacking technique, and the Mercor breach was already known before Mythos’ release. Security researcher Lukasz Olejnik described it to me as an “entirely imaginable” kind of failure that the cybersecurity industry has been routinely dealing with for the last 20 years. So Anthropic should have anticipated it and should have prepared accordingly, particularly knowing that its information had been compromised.

Anthropic also appears to have had the means to spot the breach. The company is able to “log and track model use,” Olejnik said, which should make it possible to stop unauthorized or malicious access, especially since the Mythos rollout was supposed to be highly limited. Evidently, Anthropic wasn’t monitoring closely enough — and given how dangerous it says the model is, it’s reasonable to ask why.

By Bloomberg’s account, the group was not using Mythos for cybersecurity tasks, partly because they just wanted to mess around with the new model and partly because doing so could have tipped Anthropic off. If Anthropic’s messaging surrounding Mythos is to be taken seriously, that is a lucky break. The company has framed Mythos as a “watershed moment for security,” claiming it found vulnerabilities in “​​every major operating system and web browser,” and said its release must be coordinated to allow time to “reinforce the world’s cyber defenses.”

Anthropic has a habit of using dramatic, alarming-sounding language that can be tough to interrogate cleanly, including flirting with the idea that its Claude model might be conscious. Even so, early reports from parties with access suggest Mythos is particularly adept in cybersecurity. Mozilla CTO Bobby Holley said it found hundreds of bugs in Firefox 150 and may finally give defenders a chance at complete victory over attackers. Unsurprisingly, governments and financial institutions around the world have been eager to get their hands on it. The NSA and other US agencies reportedly have access despite Anthropic’s designation as a supply chain risk, though the rollout appears to have bypassed the US cybersecurity agency, CISA, so far.

“Anthropic claims to be at the absolute forefront of all these technologies, but also positions itself as the responsible actor in all of this.”

The fact that the breach was uncovered by a reporter rather than Anthropic also raises the obvious question of whether it is an isolated incident. It “really illustrates how wide the circle of people who may be able to do this is, even if they don’t have super technically sophisticated means,” Hüsch said. Anthropic will likely comb through its supply chain to see how this happened and plug gaps, but she said there is a wide range of actors who would want access to a model like this, some of them with a great deal of money behind them. There is no reason to assume anyone else who gained access would be as restrained as the group Bloomberg reported on.

Anthropic has, to some extent, shot itself in its own foot. The company has built its identity around taking AI safety more seriously than its rivals, creating sky-high expectations for model security that jar with its apparent carelessness; the fact that Mythos was exposed through such a basic and predictable failure only underscores that. Worse still, by hyping Mythos as an unusually powerful tool too dangerous for public release, Anthropic turned it into an obvious target, whether for malicious actors or hackers simply looking for a challenge.

This isn’t even the first awkward security incident around Mythos. The model’s existence was accidentally revealed before release through an “unsecured data trove” on a central system containing content for its website. Now, that model has been secretly accessed via a wholly predictable vulnerability Anthropic didn’t think to patch. Perfection is impossible, but for a company that has anointed itself the vanguard of AI safety, such a basic misstep is hard to justify, even with some of the bad luck it’s had.

To Hüsch, the whole episode can be summed up in one word: humiliation. “Anthropic claims to be at the absolute forefront of all these technologies, but also positions itself as the responsible actor in all of this,” she said. “The fact that this has now been accessed through unauthorized means so quickly, and through such an unsophisticated attempt, is really a humiliation for them.”

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Robert Hart

    Robert Hart

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Robert Hart

  • AI

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All AI

  • Anthropic

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Anthropic

  • Report

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Report

  • Security

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Security

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Tidal won’t pay royalties on AI-generated music but isn’t banning it outright

T-Mobile is booting customers from its oldest plans

Leaked iPhone 18 Pro photos reportedly wound up on the dark web

At $499, Apple’s M3-powered iPad Air is a good deal

WhatsApp is launching usernames: here’s how to reserve yours

These camera-free smart glasses made me feel like Tony Stark

He changed outdoor cooking forever — then took over Weber

The Flipper Zero creators’ Busy Bar productivity display will go on sale next month

Comcast is splitting in two

Editors Picks

Island Passage Accelerates toward Drilling at the EL02 Project Bougainville Island, Papua New Guinea

June 29, 2026

Collision with transport truck sends 3 to hospital with serious injuries

June 29, 2026

Inuit leaders to meet Carney, ministers amid growing tensions over Arctic

June 29, 2026

Tidal won’t pay royalties on AI-generated music but isn’t banning it outright

June 29, 2026

Latest News

Vetty Named a 2026 North American Inspiring Workplace

June 29, 2026

Next Hydrogen, a Canadian Company, Expands Further into the Fusion Market Through Strategic Collaboration with Fusion Fuel Cycles Inc.

June 29, 2026

Abrielle Toronto Honoured with Wine Spectator’s 2026 Award of Excellence for Thoughtfully Curated, Female-Led Wine Program

June 29, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Canada. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version