Overview
- Anthropic announced Tuesday, June 2, that Project Glasswing will grow from about 50 partners to roughly 200 organizations across more than 15 countries after formally inviting the European Commission and ENISA to participate.
- The company says Claude Mythos has flagged about 23,019 potential vulnerabilities in scans of over 1,000 open-source projects and that partners have reported more than 10,000 high- or critical-severity findings so far.
- Mythos can both identify flaws and autonomously generate exploit chains, which is why Anthropic is keeping general release restricted until stronger cyber safeguards and patching processes are in place.
- Partners in the expanded cohort include vendors and maintainers of software used by power, water, healthcare, communications, and hardware sectors who must meet security requirements before getting access.
- The expansion comes as Anthropic confidentially filed for an IPO and as rivals roll out competing cyber-focused models, raising pressure to balance defensive benefits, oversight, and the capacity to verify and patch large numbers of bugs.