EU has had productive meetings with Anthropic over possible future access to Mythos
ENISA will be the first EU body in Project Glasswing as Anthropic opens access after Mythos found 10,000-plus zero-day vulnerabilities.
- On Monday, the European Commission confirmed it held "several productive meetings" with American AI firm Anthropic regarding potential access to its Mythos model, though official deal terms remain unclear.
- Launched in April under Project Glasswing, Mythos excels at identifying software vulnerabilities but initially triggered concerns that bad actors could exploit the system to accelerate cybercrime.
- While the Commission gained access to OpenAI's GPT-5.5-Cyber model in May, the United States government has reportedly hesitated to share powerful models with non-American entities to maintain dominance.
- Negotiations center on granting the European Commission's cybersecurity agency ENISA access to Mythos to bolster defenses against cyberattacks, pending final agreement with Anthropic.
- EU tech sovereignty spokesperson Thomas Regnier stated "Let's not forget that Mythos is not one off," noting the bloc is intensifying discussions with the United States on emerging AI risks.
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25 Articles
Anthropic gives EU cybersecurity agency ENISA access to Mythos AI
Anthropic has agreed to give the European Union’s cybersecurity agency, ENISA, access to Claude Mythos, the AI model that has autonomously discovered more than 10,000 high- and critical-severity zero-day vulnerabilities across every major operating system and web browser. The decision, communicated to the European Commission over the weekend, makes ENISA the first EU institution to join […] This story continues at The Next Web
EU has had productive meetings with Anthropic over possible future access to Mythos
The European Commission has had several productive meetings with Anthropic regarding possible future access for EU bodies to Anthropic's Mythos AI product, it said on Monday.
Anthropic gives the EU cybersecurity agency access to its language model. The AI tool can detect vulnerabilities in systems, many US companies already use it.
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