Anthropic Kills Mythos 5 and Fable 5 Over Government Export Panic
The AI industry just took a massive L as Anthropic nuked access to its latest models. Thanks to a panicked letter from Howard Lutnick, these high-end AIs are now effectively illegal for anyone without a special government license.
It all started when Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick sent a pointed order to Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, essentially declaring that Mythos 5 and Fable 5 are now controlled assets. The government mandated that anyone—including foreigners physically present in the United States—needs a specific export license to access these models. Since Anthropic lacks the magical ability to distinguish between international users and local citizens in real-time, they decided to pull the plug on everyone globally to avoid potential criminal prosecution.
The underlying issue stems from Amazon’s recent stress-testing, which discovered that Fable 5 can be weaponized into a vulnerability-scanning tool if you whisper the right prompts into its ear. The government is treating these AI models like sensitive military hardware, invoking export control laws that restrict technologies capable of aiding foreign intelligence. The mandate is currently absolute, forcing Anthropic to route every single access request through the government’s SNAP-R portal, a bureaucratic nightmare that effectively turns a cutting-edge chatbot into a restricted missile guidance system.
Tech giants are finding out the hard way that when AI gets too smart, it stops being a product and starts being a geopolitical weapon. Whether this is a necessary precaution against a digital arms race or just a clunky attempt by bureaucrats to control software they don't understand remains the multi-billion dollar question. The sheer absurdity of killing a global product because developers can't check passports at the digital door is a masterclass in modern governance.
Source: Bloomberg
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