Learn about the upsides and downsides of Claude Fable 5
The post How Powerful is Claude Fable (Mythos) 5 for Coding? appeared first on Towards Data Science.
On today’s episode of Decoder, my guest is Hayden Field, senior AI reporter for The Verge. Often when Hayden comes on the show, it’s because something has gone wrong in the world of AI. Last weekend, that something was a pretty intense mix of Anthropic, the Trump administration, and Anthropic’s new AI model, Fable 5.
On Friday, not even a week since Anthropic released Fable to the public, the US government said it was imposing export controls on the new model, as well as the underlying Mythos model that Fable is based on. Those controls restricted foreign nationals, even those working for Anthropic in the United States, from accessing these models. Anthropic then took Fable and Mythos offline for everyone, because the company said it was worried it would not be able to restrict access and reasonably comply with the order otherwise.
As you might imagine, this is all a giant mess. Hayden actually just published a fantastic play-by-play on The Verge about how this all went down last Fri
Midjourney's medical pivot highlights the potential for AI-driven innovation in healthcare, but speculative crypto links could mislead investors.
The post Midjourney launches medical division with sci-fi body scanner, but the Mythos connection remains unverified appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Days before Anthropic took its most advanced AI models offline, the White House ordered the company to revoke SK Telecom’s access to Claude Mythos over claims of alleged ties to China.
The emergence of AI models like Mythos could destabilize global cybersecurity, prompting urgent reevaluation of digital defense strategies.
The post Anthropic’s Mythos model raises global security concerns as FT sounds the alarm appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Seventy-six cybersecurity professionals have signed an open letter urging the U.S. government to lift its export control order on Anthropic’s Fable and Mythos models, warning that removing advanced AI capabilities from network defenders while adversaries continue to develop their own tools represents a serious national security risk. Prominent signatories include former Facebook chief of security […]
Anthropic’s apparent inability to identify which of its users are foreign nationals has led to some collateral damage from a US export ban on its most powerful AI models — but there is a way around it, at least for some.
On Friday, the US government ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable and Mythos, the new AI models it had introduced just a few days earlier, to all foreign nationals, citing national security reasons.
While the drafters of the US order may have had sovereignty in mind, they ended up making it an identity management problem.
“The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance,” Anthropic said in a blog post commenting on the order, implying that it was unable to distinguish between foreign nationals and US citizens in its user base.
That’s likely the case today, but for its consumer customers, an update to its privacy policy, introduced last week and taking effect on July 8, gives it a new