US summons bank bosses over cyber risks from Anthropic's latest AI model

Wall Street called to DC over “danger AI” — internet screams hype, IPO, and drama

TLDR: The US Treasury summoned big-bank chiefs over Anthropic’s secret AI, Mythos, which it says uncovers a huge number of software flaws. Online, people split: some call it an IPO-fueled scare campaign that could trigger a government ban, others say it simply exposes long-ignored problems — and muddled headlines fuel confusion.

America’s top bank bosses got hauled into Washington to talk about Anthropic’s hush‑hush AI, “Mythos,” which reportedly found thousands of software holes — some nearly 27 years old. The model isn’t public and is being shared only with tech giants like Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft. That’s the news. The comments? Absolute chaos.

Skeptics came in hot, calling it a classic IPO pump: one user slammed the “cult mentality” of elites and compared the hype to Silicon Valley’s greatest showmen. Another warned that selling your model as dangerous could backfire, with the White House slapping an executive‑order ban before the public ever sees it. Others mocked the panic: “Of course the marketing worked,” one quipped — the internet can spot a playbook when it sees one.

There’s real nuance too. Some argued Mythos isn’t the villain — it just spotlights old, ignored problems — and blamed Anthropic’s messaging for pairing it with “Project Glasswing” (a fix‑it initiative), making the model look like the threat. Commenters also fact‑checked: the Claude code leak wasn’t the same as this Mythos story, despite headlines mashing them together. Meanwhile, with Fed chair Jerome Powell in the room and JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon warning AI makes cyber risk worse, the vibe was part doomsday, part meme: “Mythos found bugs older than your dad’s flip phone.” Banks are spooked; the crowd smells marketing — and drama

Key Points

  • The US Treasury secretary convened major bank leaders in Washington to discuss cyber risks linked to Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI model.
  • Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell and CEOs of systemically important banks reportedly attended, with JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon invited but absent.
  • Anthropic says Mythos has identified thousands of software vulnerabilities and is restricting the model’s release for the first time.
  • Select organizations with access include Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Cisco, Broadcom, and the Linux Foundation.
  • Concerns include potential misuse by hackers to guess passwords or crack encryption; some vulnerabilities found are up to 27 years old.

Hottest takes

“people at the top operated in some sort of cult mentality” — PedroBatista
“Promoting the model as potentially dangerous might backfire with the government banning it” — sroussey
“Such an obvious playbook by now I’m surprised some people here fell for it” — nothinkjustai
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