
"The briefing has been requested by Andrew Bailey, the Bank of England governor and FSB chair, and will be delivered to G20 finance ministries and central banks under the board's umbrella."
"Bailey is the right person to have made the call. In an April 15 speech at Columbia University, he named Mythos by name, alongside the Gulf escalation, as one of the two events that had moved cyber up regulators' risk ranking 'faster than any other category in recent years'."
"Anthropic describes it as a cybersecurity model designed to surface long-standing vulnerabilities in browsers, infrastructure, and software, and has claimed it has already found thousands of high-severity flaws across major operating systems and browsers . When directed to develop working exploits against those flaws in internal testing, the model reportedly succeeded on the first attempt in more than 83% of cases."
"'It would be reasonable to think that the events in the Gulf are the most recent challenge to us in this world,' Bailey said, 'until, I think it was last Friday, you wake up to find that Anthropic may have found a way to crack the whole cyber risk world open.'"
Andrew Bailey, chair of the Financial Stability Board, has invited Anthropic to present findings from its Mythos cybersecurity model to G20 finance ministries and central banks. The briefing will focus on cybersecurity vulnerabilities Mythos has identified across the global financial system. Bailey previously highlighted Mythos by name and cited cyber risk as rising faster than other regulatory risk categories. Mythos is described as a cybersecurity model that surfaces long-standing vulnerabilities in browsers, infrastructure, and software. Anthropic has claimed it found thousands of high-severity flaws in major operating systems and browsers. In internal testing, the model reportedly developed working exploits on the first attempt in more than 83% of cases, raising dual-use concerns for regulators.
Read at TNW | Anthropic
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