Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 1
Anthropic Grants ENISA Access to Mythos Ahead of Wider Release in Project Glasswing
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 1

Anthropic Grants ENISA Access to Mythos Ahead of Wider Release in Project Glasswing

4 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 1
  • ENISA is set to gain access to Anthropic’s Mythos, an AI tool designed to find and exploit vulnerabilities in computer systems, according to people familiar with the matter.
  • Anthropic is bringing the EU cybersecurity agency into Project Glasswing, a program that lets selected organizations test Mythos before the company releases it more broadly.
  • The move gives a key European regulator-side cybersecurity body early exposure to a powerful offensive-security AI system as Anthropic expands pre-release testing.
As a US firm gives Europe its top AI hacking tool, can defenses be built faster than adversaries can weaponize it?
Who truly controls global security when a private AI can find thousands of flaws that governments cannot?

Europe Gains Operational Access to Anthropic’s Mythos: ENISA Joins Project Glasswing, Closing the AI Cybersecurity Gap

Overview

Europe previously faced a major challenge in cybersecurity due to its lack of direct access to advanced AI models like Anthropic's Mythos, relying instead on regulatory frameworks rather than hands-on testing. This left Europe at risk of regulating AI without having the necessary capabilities, while the British AI Security Institute, with early access to Mythos, was already identifying vulnerabilities through active red-teaming. The launch of Anthropic's Project Glasswing, a consortium focused on securing critical software with advanced tools, changed this landscape. By joining Project Glasswing, ENISA closed the access gap, giving Europe both a seat at the table and the tools needed to defend against sophisticated AI-driven cyber threats.

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