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Amazon CEO's talks with U.S. officials triggered crackdown on Anthropic models (wsj.com)
Topfi 17 hours ago [-]
I still am struggling to understand why they informed the government about something that is known to be an issue in every LLM. There is no LLM that cannot be jailbroken, so unless this means that we have reached the absolute maximum publicly accessible US made LLMs are allowed to operate at with GPT 5.5, this is not grounded in any sane regulation attempt.

Does anyone know what limits Fable 5 has overstepped in the eyes of the government? Parameter count? Certain benchmark results? Training computer?

Cause if it’s just the ability to assist with cyberattacks and being jailbreakable, there is no model previously released that isn’t equally guilty.

Remember that for GPT 5.5 and 5.4, OpenAI also restricted the cybersecurity focused use under designated models, otherwise rerouting to 5.3-codex like Fable did with Opus 4.8. And both OpenAI models can also be jailbroken all the same.

Basically, what was the reason to tell the government now and not with Opus 4.5 or GPT 5.4? sama has been doing the rounds with apocalyptic predictions…

themgt 14 hours ago [-]
I submitted separately, but this Axios report has some details that call a lot of the speculation in this thread into question, i.e. that this wasn't much of a "jailbreak" at all and that it's not Anthropic-specific - the White House intends to generally regulate Mythos-class models (whatever exactly that means):

Between the lines: The government's response "seems way out of line with what's actually in the research report," Luta Security CEO Katie Moussouris, who Anthropic shared the Amazon report with, told Axios.

Moussouris said the researchers were able to find security vulnerabilities by asking questions normal defenders would ask AI, which is exactly what the model was intended to do.

An administration official told Axios they do not view other models as national security threats because they do not surpass the bar that Mythos set.

Anything at Mythos level or above would need to go through the administration to ensure the government's national security apparatus is hardened enough, the official added.

https://www.axios.com/2026/06/13/anthropic-amazon-white-hous...

rustyhancock 2 hours ago [-]
> the White House intends to generally regulate Mythos-class models (whatever exactly that means)

This is not at all surprising. And I hope people don't make the mistake that it's a "this administration" problem.

It was obviously from the early days of these LLMs that the shoe was going to drop and we (as Joe public) would not retain access. I mean that once ChatGPT3 dropped it was clear there was some level of functionality at which we would be denied further access.

The only carve out will be as per older technical innovations the US is more concerned with foreign national access than US citizen access at home.

I don't remember the details with encryption but it was basically you have to ship a breakable version for the rest of the world, and you generally sometimes ship a backdoored version.

And Anthropic is more concerned by what they are asked to do to US citizens than the broader group.

Same story with encryption, CPUs, GPUs, blah blah blah.

b112 57 minutes ago [-]
Yet unlike CPUs/GPUs, there's currently zero way to lock down who has access.

Giving access to 'citizens', with the current way the Internet operates, is absurd. One back door into a desktop, workstation, and 'validated citizens' are now 'hackers from where-ever'.

x______________ 12 minutes ago [-]
>and 'validated citizens' are now 'hackers from where-ever'.

Yes, because knowledge is power, and information is meant to be free.

softwaredoug 13 hours ago [-]
That’s a terrible way to create AI regulations

If they actually cared about this issue we’d have predictable laws and regulatory bodies that let companies actually plan

There’s a reason royal fiat doesn’t lead to healthy economies. It’s just confusing and chaotic. It’s not clear why anyone would invest in a new model now.

Then the next administration comes in and instantly, by fiat, they decide to lift the ban. The market just gets jerked around with no ability to plan long term investments.

aqme28 12 hours ago [-]
It’s a great way to regulate if you’re corrupt. When the rules are opaque and arbitrary, there’s a lot more room for corruption.
_heimdall 10 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
Kina 4 hours ago [-]
Whether or not you agree with how US laws are drafted, this administration has no logical foundation for anything it does which is a massively different and worse problem by orders of magnitude.

This administration runs on whims. This is horrifying and there is real harm in this we have yet to see the full repercussions of.

mlrtime 2 hours ago [-]
You are biased, previous administration war on crypto was worse IMO. The attacks on private banking for companies dealing with crypto and 0 laws by the SEC.

This is a fact regardless if you like/dislike crypto.

AnthonyMouse 3 hours ago [-]
The lack of a logical foundation isn't the novelty. The whole system has run on whims and backfilled reasoning for a long time. That's the problem.

If it had always been the rule of law until now then we would have an apparatus set up to impose checks and balances and accountability on government officials, but because those things have so atrophied from continuous contempt and neglect, no one knows how to demonstrate that what Trump is doing is wrong without also conceding that half of what the government has been doing for decades is wrong. But they also don't want to stop doing those things and therefore have rather a dilemma.

Of course, that's assuming you actually demand logical consistency. If you don't care about that you can do whatever you want -- which is kind of the trouble.

shakna 2 hours ago [-]
In countries other than the US, most regulatory bodies are outside the government for exactly that reason - to take the power away from the political elite, whilst continuing to ensure safety and reason come first.

The new law the US is proposing here, is the exact opposite. A kingly appointed adjudicator to decide things.

VectorLock 11 hours ago [-]
Not that I'm ever one to support anything this regime does but I'm kind of okay with them pumping the brakes on this until we really get a handle on what the

The USG has limited capabilities on technologies from GPS chips to thermal imaging with "national security" implications for a while and now they're doing it but it seems people don't like how ill defined "Mythos-class" means. Would it be better if it was some %X on some benchmark that the frontier model peddlers could just limbo under to make it "acceptable" for release? Do we just accept that jailbreaking will never be prevented?

The part of all this I do have a problem with is the national state cybersecurity cat-and-mouse this kicks off. Will the US tech landscape have enough time to safely get a "Mythos-class" model to harden itself before China releases or leverages a "Mythos-class" cyber munition?

handoflixue 8 hours ago [-]
"pumping the brakes" would be fine. This is slamming to a full stop on a crowded freeway and causing a three car pile-up. Warning and advanced notice are the difference between regulation and tyranny, and in this case we're just getting tyranny
AnneTrotter 4 minutes ago [-]
Same problem as always. This administration never figured out that how you do things matters. They love the drama of the crash more than actually implementing functional policies.
VectorLock 6 hours ago [-]
Given the current climate I'd be inclined to declare "tyranny" also but in this case I think given the degree of potential damage the slamming on of brakes is warranted when the alternative is, to strain a metaphor, going full speed off a cliff at relativistic speeds.
andai 2 hours ago [-]
Yeah, we have a lot of critical infrastructure connected to the internet. Based on the trend the last few weeks, I expect major cyber attacks this year.

I expect that to happen no matter what we do (since the open source models are rapidly catching up), but gating access to the frontier models for a while sounds like a reasonable precaution — as annoying as it is to me personally, to be deprived of such shiny toys!

Fable is a massive step up and I didn't expect it public for another month or two. Something tells me we'll get it back in a few weeks though.

patcon 4 hours ago [-]
I'm feeling strong alignment with your perspective here. Thanks
voidfunc 7 hours ago [-]
> and in this case we're just getting tyranny

You expected different with this administration?

handoflixue 6 hours ago [-]
Of course I expect the government to act better than this! But I am not so naive as to assume my expectations will be met.
VectorLock 6 hours ago [-]
A broken clock is still occasionally right.
chias 3 hours ago [-]
I have no insider information so this is all appreciation, but:

When it comes to legislative things, there is pretty much always a timeline in which to become compliant. I do wonder if there was opportunity to give warning etc. but Anthropic decided to perform an immediate full stop deliberately causing the metaphorical three-car pileup, because the more painful for the users, the more pressure from the people there will be on the government to undo this.

See also: those painfully annoying cookie banners that are malicious compliance in the most irritating way possible, which GDPR does not require, in order to make people think GDPR is dumb.

thfuran 10 hours ago [-]
> The USG has limited capabilities on technologies from GPS chips

Are you referring to Selective Availability? That ended decades ago.

rcruzeiro 8 hours ago [-]
Selective Availability accuracy restrictions ended decades ago, but GPS technology is still subject to various military and export-control restrictions.
VectorLock 6 hours ago [-]
Not selective availability. COCOM Limits that prevent a GPS chip from operating above a certain speed and altitude.
withinboredom 4 hours ago [-]
It’s funny because it’s just (relativistic) math. It would cost a couple hundred bucks to roll your own with no restrictions.
tapoxi 12 hours ago [-]
> That’s a terrible way to create AI regulations

This administration doesn't do regulations, its extortion. Same as the tariffs. Just grease someone's palm and then the vague restriction is lifted.

K0balt 5 hours ago [-]
I still can get de minimus from China no problem, as long as it’s Ali express. I wonder why? When anthropic answers that question, we will have access to fable again.
mlrtime 2 hours ago [-]
And that is the same as previous administrations, now you just see it openly.
andsoitis 11 hours ago [-]
In a parallel universe where we have Biden (or Democratic Party) administration, how different do you think the regulations / approach would be for this fast moving and unpredictable technology?
digitaltrees 9 hours ago [-]
It’s hard not to see this ban as being motivated by retribution for refusing to use the models for spying and autonomous warfare.
hilariously 9 hours ago [-]
Probably using the rule of law in some way? Talking about it in public? Legislating? You know... government type stuff?
mlrtime 2 hours ago [-]
Like Biden did for crypto? Oh wait, no he had a backdoor war using the banking system and refused to enact new laws.
vineyardmike 1 hours ago [-]
Refusing to enact new laws around a thing most people don’t like, don’t want, and don’t care about (oh and is used for scams often) is quite different than a secret back door war.
ceejayoz 11 hours ago [-]
They at least wouldn't depend on how extensively you publicly glaze the President.
b--l 5 hours ago [-]
There is not a single chance this would have happened under that admin. Not one single chance.
softwaredoug 8 hours ago [-]
It doesn’t really matter what party does it

The ideal case is a statutory agency with regulatory authority that sets very clear standards for what model capabilities can and cannot release. Those are set ahead of time and well known by frontier model providers.

Most normal regulations are managed through the administrative procedures act process. That’s a legal requirement that involves deliberation and public comment.

I’d argue you could pretty easily enumerate most capabilities that have been obvious concerns for a while. For example, cyber security.

This structure can last decades and reassure players they can operate in the market without rules changing suddenly without warning.

Some kind of sudden, temporary action like this export control tool is legally fragile. Even if sometimes necessary in exceptional cases. But if the administration sees this as a permanent way of working, they won’t be helping anyone (but maybe themselves through grift).

If the administration truly cares about functional regulation (which maybe they don’t) they need a sturdier legal structure that lasts past Trump. Not flimsy edicts that change with the wind

derektank 8 hours ago [-]
I wholeheartedly agree with what you’re saying in general. I do wonder though, given how rapid advancements in AI are occurring, if even an agency with statutory authority would be able to establish a predictable regulatory environment, let alone do so while maintaining a lengthy public comment period and a whole of government approach. There are obvious flaws with the current administration’s approach to, well, almost everything. But I’m not sure if this is even a tractable problem with the governance structures we have been employing over the last 50 years.
softwaredoug 23 minutes ago [-]
Nothing being talked about with Mythos wasn’t a known AI risk 12 months ago. Those rules could have been established to guide frontier labs.

But yes crazy things happen. Maybe it won’t catch everything.

The right answer are giving the govt / this agency explicit legal, short term model pause capabilities to let the rule making process happen if something completely out of band happens. Or let the agency study/approve models prior to release.

Not sudden, unexpected application of export laws.

Yet in this case, for Fable, cybersecurity risks have been well know for some time. A rule created years ago when we knew this would happen could have given frontier labs and the market predictability.

SpicyLemonZest 11 hours ago [-]
They probably would have been in line with Executive Order 14110, the Biden administration's detailed description of a principled approach to regulation of the AI industry. It would have been aligned with the Trump administration's stated goals as well, but a coalition of rich VCs successfully bribed him to rescind it as one of his first acts in office, because the primary principle of Trumpist government is that people who pay Donald Trump a lot of money get what they want.
3 hours ago [-]
warumdarum 3 hours ago [-]
Why amazon? I bet the three letters had a hissy fit field day worrying that their expensive hancrafted zero days would evaporate and software would get more secure. So, the government is throwing a wrench for the NSA
Topfi 13 hours ago [-]
Interesting. Hope there is any clarification on what "Mythos level" is and why 5.5-cyber doesn't arise to it. Any metric I could come up with (parameters, pre-train compute, benchmark scores, etc.) seems somewhere between imperfect and utterly nonsensical. Pure speculation, but GPT-5 series models including the new 5.5 pre-train appear far closer to Sonnet than Opus or Fable in pure parameter count, so maybe that's it, but the "they do not surpass the bar that Mythos set" line sounds more like there is a believe that Mythos/Fable are more capable in cybersecurity tasks, whereas the data [0] doesn't seem to bare this out. I did not do any cybersecurity assessment of Fable 5 myself, partly due to personal reasons that make that something I'm abstaining from, but my coding evals showed that while task adherence and assessment wise it was neck and neck with 5.5, the task inference was a major jump again (something prior Anthropic models tended to already do incredibly well on) and while that makes it a far better model to work with for UX experiments, I don't see how that translates to cybersecurity, along with the aforementioned publicly available evals by AISI.

Seeing as neither Mythos nor GPT-5.5 had been pre-trained with a particular focus on cybersecurity, this would have to mean any model that benchmarks better than GPT-5.4 or Opus 4.6 on these tasks cannot be used by None-US-Citizens. If such guidance isn't enforced for all US labs, I think that's irrefutable evidence that this isn't about cybersecurity or "the bar that Mythos set"...

[0] https://xcancel.com/AISecurityInst/status/205458976317312633...

handoflixue 8 hours ago [-]
Firefox bugs found per month, actively advertised as a sign of how powerful Mythos is: https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2F...

I am, thus far, not aware of 5.5-Cyber managing anything similar to "Project Glasswing"

That said, the government also knew about Mythos since Project Glasswing was announced... April 7th, two months ago, so if they wanted to block a public release, they had more than enough time to do it in an orderly way.

And basically every sign that Mythos is well above the previous baseline was pretty publicly known by early May, when we started getting stuff like the Firefox bug reports.

I can see an argument that Mythos is just barely a "cut above" enough to regulate, but I cannot see any argument for doing this by a fiat order three days after the release.

irthomasthomas 13 hours ago [-]
They literally asked for it. Two days ago Amodei wrote an essay urging the government to regulate them. He explicitly cited Mythos, as proof that frontier AI has acquired autonomous hacking capabilities that threaten critical infrastructure and national security.

  "Mythos Preview scrambled the global cybersecurity landscape. But its broader significance is that it proves beyond doubt that AI models are now tools of global and national strategic consequence." 


  "The government should have the power to block or deter deployment of the model if it is determined, in light of third-party assessment, to present unacceptable risks. This power must be scoped to the above four specific risks and there must be protective measures against political favoritism or arbitrary decisions" 
https://darioamodei.com/post/policy-on-the-ai-exponential

A third-party demonstrated that it was possible to jailbreak the safety measures of Fable to access the raw Mythos abilities. Abilities which Anthropic say are too dangerous for the public.

Edit. From David Sacks:

  — A highly credible trusted partner of both Anthropic and the USG who was testing Fable came forward with a jailbreak of those guardrails. The Admin asked Dario to fix the jailbreak or de-deploy the model. Dario refused.

   — In their blog post, Anthropic defended its decision by saying the jailbreak isn’t serious. That is not what the trusted partner and the USG believe; nor is that kind of minimizing language consistent with Anthropic’s brand as the AI safety company. It’s difficult to fathom how they could claim a jailbreak allowing operability of a cyber weapon could be defined as not “serious".
crowbahr 11 hours ago [-]
Cynically: this is an attempt to quash open source or discount model competition through regulatory capture.
sanex 11 hours ago [-]
I'm sure it's also a step towards requiring id and limiting access for us plebians to real power and keeping it for maintaining or growing power of those in charge. It's all an excuse to give us a Westworld season 3. Probably a better example out there..
rfsck4 8 hours ago [-]
[dead]
sigmarule 12 hours ago [-]
> A third-party demonstrated that it was possible to jailbreak the safety measures of Fable to access the raw Mythos abilities. Abilities which Anthropic say are too dangerous for the public.

Pressure test this assumption before getting behind this position.

irthomasthomas 12 hours ago [-]
I will certainly revisit it as more information comes out, but is it your contention that Anthropic solved jailbreaking with Mythos?
apstls 10 hours ago [-]
What you claim contradicts Anthropic’s statements. I assume that is the contention.
sigmarule 12 hours ago [-]
That is a strawman. My contention is what you just implicitly acknowledged - there is not information put out yet to validate the quoted claim. There are claims to the contrary, as well, from Anthropic themselves.
drawnwren 11 hours ago [-]
In the absence of information, maybe it’s better to ask which claim is more extraordinary.

That,

A. Anthropic solved the llm jailbreak problem with mythos (despite no claim to have done so on their part)

B. That a full jailbreak of mythos is possible.

vlovich123 10 hours ago [-]
That’s not what the claim is though.

Anthropic’s claims are as follows if you read their post:

* this is not a universal jailbreak method

* the jailbreak affords you the same capabilities you get already with other models, not Mythos.

In this situation it’s which party do you trust more and history would suggest this administration is very playful with the truth, especially when it comes to economically damaging the company that’s become their political enemy

sigmarule 10 hours ago [-]
There is not an absence of information.

There is information, from Anthropic, concerning the jailbreaks that motivated this action, that directly contradicts the statement.

There is just an absence of information backing the statement I responded to.

I find it so odd this is apparently so contentious a take.

drawnwren 6 hours ago [-]
The existence of a jailbreak free llm in 2026 is extremely contentious to me. You can argue about the specifics of this exact jailbreak, but generally pliny and amazon both reported mythos jailbreaks in <7 days. It seems very reasonable to expect that a well funded state actor could achieve better results given significantly more funding, determination and most importantly unfettered access.
s1artibartfast 5 hours ago [-]
Nobody here is claiming fable is jailbreak free. Not anthropic and not in this thread. This was known before launch. The question remains one of degree and capabilities.
drawnwren 5 hours ago [-]
Yeah, if you're arguing that "this, according to anthropic, existentially dangerous model has only had its safeguards partially circumvented so we shouldn't step in" ... it's hard for me to take you seriously?

Put another way, the thing we are all concerned with is the complete circumvention of safeguards that is normally possible with llms. If you _aren't_ arguing that this isn't possible, you're not engaging in discussing the the thing that is concerning to regulators or those discussing the regulation.

linkregister 4 hours ago [-]
A disappointing trend is to frame the opposing argument in extreme terms rather than engaging with the substance of the assertion.

The latter portion is grand standing about how incredulous the commenter is that someone might trust an LLM company about the strength of their harnesses' if-then-else statements for request routing.

Why bother with an unsubstantial comment?

what 12 hours ago [-]
What assumption?
sigmarule 12 hours ago [-]
The one I quoted, which contradicts Anthropic’s post and has no supporting evidence publicly available. That a jailbreak was found that accesses the model’s _raw_ capabilities. Something Anthropic has explained was not the case.
apstls 11 hours ago [-]
It is pretty clear, no? Anthropic claims that the jailbreaks they were made aware of did not access the model’s raw capability, explained that there are protections to mitigate the impact of successful jailbreaks, etc. Coming here and stating something to the contrary with zero explanation or actual evidence is the assumption.
stouset 8 hours ago [-]
“This power must be scoped to the above four specific risks and there must be protective measures against political favoritism or arbitrary decisions.”
handoflixue 8 hours ago [-]
> They literally asked for it.

Yes, and rape victims are "asking for it" by wearing short skirts. I thought we stopped with this nonsense a couple decades ago?

There's a huge difference between "we want regulation", and the government swinging it's dick at random.

If the government had said, a week ago, don't release Fable? That wouldn't have gotten nearly this reaction. And the government has known that these capabilties exist since they were announced TWO MONTHS AGO.

trinsic2 12 hours ago [-]
>I still am struggling to understand why they informed the government about something that is known to be an issue in every LLM. There is no LLM that cannot be jailbroken, so unless this means that we have reached the absolute maximum publicly accessible US made LLMs are allowed to operate at with GPT 5.5, this is not grounded in any sane regulation attempt.

I wondering where you are getting the idea that there is an sane regulation right now?

thayne 14 hours ago [-]
The only reason I can see is because Amazon wanted something like this to happen. But I'm not sure what Amazon would gain from that, since they don't have their own competing frontier models.
carlossouza 11 hours ago [-]
Of course, Amazon wanted this to happen.

They own 20% of Anthropic.

Anthropic bleeds cash. They have to raise capital.

There are only 2 ways: an IPO or follow-ons from existing investors.

If the IPO gets delayed because of these restrictions, Anthropic will be forced to raise more capital from existing investors.

And existing investors (Amazon) will end up owning more of Anthropic at a cheaper valuation.

zarzavat 9 hours ago [-]
There's a much simpler explanation: Amazon's business is selling cloud services. Amazon is constantly under threat of attack and anything that disturbs the balance between attackers and defenders is bad for Amazon. Amazon also needs to keep their AWS customers safe.

This is Amazon prioritizing their 100% stake in AWS over their 20% stake in Anthropic. It's also possible that Amazon knows things that are not public.

The fact that Amazon is willing to report this despite owning shares in Anthropic and being close to a liquidation event points to whatever they found being actually serious.

milch 9 hours ago [-]
Why would they have launched Fable on Bedrock if they knew they were going to be shutting it down a day later?
carlossouza 9 hours ago [-]
I'm just stating facts:

- Amazon's CEO knew what he was doing and the possible consequences

- Anthropic must raise cash, and there are only 2 ways: an IPO or follow-ons

- If the IPO is blocked, existing investors will be able to increase their stake on Anthropic at a very attractive lower valuation

- Amazon has 20% of Anthropic: so, they benefit from it

dbmnt 7 hours ago [-]
"Amazon's CEO knew what he was doing" is not a fact. That's speculation.

When it comes to highly technical, fast moving developments like frontier AI and blue team / red team perspectives, I could see any CEO getting out over their skis. Now mix in some incompetent Trump admin officials, including apparently Howard Lutnick. I am guessing many of these people don't understand the subject matter very well at all.

zaptheimpaler 8 hours ago [-]
They would have no internally/externally defensible justification to stop the launch as they are partners/part-owners of Anthropic. They would have to let the rank-and-file keep moving on the Fable launch.
milch 4 hours ago [-]
IIRC Anthropic models haven't all been available on day 1, so it does feel like a deliberate choice, especially since they are partners/part-owners like you say. No one would have bat an eye about some corporate PR thing "blah blah mythos is too powerful and too intelligent and so we've decided to focus our capacity on Opus 4.6/4.7/4.8 for now until we have the proper safeguards in place blah blah"
conradkay 13 hours ago [-]
My guess is that they liked the status quo with Project Glasswing and didn't want Fable to be public, especially if anyone is jailbreaking it into Mythos and using it for cyber

But then it backfired spectacularly and now it seems they can't use Mythos currently

lumost 13 hours ago [-]
This is either a complete own goal by Amazon… a play to consolidate compute/model access.

Will Chinese models be allowed on the market… at all? Will startups be banned from training models of equivalent capacity?

gopher_space 11 hours ago [-]
At this point would I be outsourcing my knowledge work or would I be entering self-exile?
brianjking 13 hours ago [-]
...Not to mention that they're investors in Anthropic.
polski-g 9 hours ago [-]
Did it cross your mind that Amazon cares about the security of the United States and reported the jailbreak to protect it?
lebovic 16 hours ago [-]
Claims of retribution aside, one steelman is that Mythos is likely the most capable model that's usable by folks like the NSA [1], and decision-makers across the USG and industry partners have seen a stream of reports of Mythos successfully finding serious vulnerabilities over the past couple months due to Glasswing.

So even if GPT 5.5 is just as capable in these scenarios (which, imo, it largely is), it is not known by the government apparatus as having the same capabilities.

Personally, I think we crossed the threshold of capabilities with Opus 4.6 [2], which translated to an even more capable open-weight GLM 5.1 (which it is rumored to have distilled Opus 4.6) [3][4]. But the USG and its partners aren't fully rational actors with perfect data, so it's possible they're only viscerally aware of these capabilities in the context of Mythos.

[1]: https://www.reuters.com/business/us-security-agency-is-using...

[2]: Opus 4.6 was used for https://www.noahlebovic.com/testing-an-autonomous-hacker/

[3]: See GLM 5.1 scoring in https://www.cybergym.io/cybergym/

[4]: https://dualuse.dev/posts/chinese-models-are-sometimes-bette...

Topfi 16 hours ago [-]
I doubt that the capabilities of GPT-5.5-cyber aren’t known by the US government considering OpenAI is their primary LLM partner after Anthropic had concerns about using models for autonomous weaponry and mass surveillance of US citizens. If anything, they should have more experience in GPT-5.5s full feature set due to longer access and may even already have GPT-5.6 access.
bobthepanda 15 hours ago [-]
Hanlon's razor. Are the people with the right access talking to the right people? Wouldn't be the first time for miscommunication in the executive branch.
Topfi 14 hours ago [-]
Fair point, not unlikely, though my personal assumption is that, like with Nvidia export controls, there will be a sudden reversal with no tangible, actual, technically based reason the second a certain person has their ring kissed...
bobthepanda 14 hours ago [-]
Why not both? The current executive has missed the mark on appointments pretty badly a number of times due to the prizing of loyalty over competency.
lebovic 16 hours ago [-]
They made a deal for access, but I'm unsure if it's usable, scaled, and has vulnerabilities attributed to it at this point. But I have no inside information here, so I could be wrong.
throwaway85825 16 hours ago [-]
If it had vulnerabilities the marketing copy would already be written and published.
nandomrumber 13 hours ago [-]
[dead]
nowittyusername 14 hours ago [-]
The simple answer is that Trump has a stick up his ass against Anthropic and is also fond of stock market manipulation. No need to get too deep when it comes to dealing with that orange shmuck.
downrightmike 13 hours ago [-]
This is just another shakedown like with Tylenol etc, knock the product, lower the stock price and have a competitor hostile takeover, or get kickbacks
arcanemachiner 13 hours ago [-]
This is a hypothesis, and a viable one.

But I caution you against drawing conclusions from your hypothesis and calling it a day, instead of taking in the available data and using it to broaden your understanding of what's actually happening.

This could be many things: a shakedown, Trump's pettiness, marketing kayfabe, an actual government reaction to a very weaponizable technology, and so on.

But if you call it "just another shakedown" and go about your day, then you're doing yourself a disservice, because the story is still unfolding and we don't have all the facts.

You don't actually have the full story, so don't delude yourself into think you do.

whattheheckheck 11 hours ago [-]
Its been 10 years of historical abuse. You're a battered spouse in a bad relationship with the most audacious narcissist that has ever lived.
arcanemachiner 10 hours ago [-]
I'm not American, and I definitely don't support Trump.

Care to spin the outrage wheel again and lob another unfounded insult at me?

At any rate, feel free to indulge in (plausible) conspiracy theories until further details of the story have emerged.

pksebben 7 hours ago [-]
Real question; what are we supposed to do about that information delay when it directly enables corruption and usury? This is an ongoing issue with historical precedent; the repeal of glass-steagall, MKULTRA and COINTELPRO, Iran-contra, watergate, the list is indefinably long.

All of these all surfed in on that very temporal ambiguity, and the fact that we have zero recourse in a plurality of cases - a situation that has eroded over time, not gotten better, and could feasibly be credited with a large part of the palpable social decay that real people are suffering from every day right now.

So what do we do about it? "Indulging in plausible conspiracy theories" could also be read here as "trying to get out ahead of this imminent yet undclear threat"

arcanemachiner 3 hours ago [-]
There's nothing wrong with pattern recognition. I'm just cautioning against a knee-jerk reaction based on the current information, which is limited, and will become more clear over the next few days.

I don't think the outcome will be particularly unexpected (I assume that Anthropic will have to kiss the ring), but it's not yet clear what the outcome is. I mostly take issue with uninformed people claiming with ignorant confidence that they KNOW exactly what is happening in this scenario, which they, in all likelihood, do not.

So yeah, we all probably know how this will shake out to some degree, but those who claim they KNOW it's a "shakedown like with Tylenol" are just guessing, a.k.a making shit up. This may be part of the usual playbook, but it will likely have its own twists and turns, or could turn out to be something different altogether.

vessenes 3 hours ago [-]
I’d invert - given their significant competition for government business, what would be a reason for not doing this?
ReflectedImage 10 hours ago [-]
Probably a con job. The AI companies don't think they will be able to significantly improve their models in the next year or so, so they are stalling with government regulations whilst taking in investor money.
sagarpatil 4 hours ago [-]
Doesn’t Amazon own 14% of Anthropic?
vrganj 17 hours ago [-]
Its not Fable 5 that overstepped in the eyes of the US government.

It's Anthropic.

This is transparent revenge for them daring to try and push back a little on enabling war crimes.

noelsusman 15 hours ago [-]
Anthropic is perfectly fine with the US government using Claude to commit war crimes. The US military has done hundreds of extra-judicial killings in the waters around South America over the last year and Anthropic hasn't had anything to say about that.
ern 3 hours ago [-]
Holy crap, I didn't realize that some many people had been killed, over 200 according to a New York Times report: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/31/world/americas/us-boat-st...
felixgallo 15 hours ago [-]
Use nuance and judgement, friend. Anthropic notably pushed back on completely autonomous no-human-in-the-loop drone killings and mass surveillance of the US population, where others like OpenAI scrambled to agree. Anthropic isn't perfect but that doesn't make them equally bad.
firesteelrain 9 hours ago [-]
Trust no one, friend. Believe what you want to believe.
Cider9986 17 hours ago [-]
>This is transparent revenge for them daring to try and push back a little on enabling war crimes.

Anthropic wasn't pushing back on enabling war crimes. They said they didn't want the models to work with autonomous weapons because the the models weren't good enough.

alpinisme 14 hours ago [-]
Arguably it’s a worse (or different) war crime to knowingly target people incompetently and thus kill more innocent civilians. In this respect, they showed themselves against one war crime. Not “war crimes” in general but a specific misuse of ai in war.
inigyou 12 hours ago [-]
That's pushing back. The regime doesn't care if the models are good enough, they want the optics of killing lots of people using cutting edge tech, they don't really care if it's the right people.
dandellion 16 hours ago [-]
Whether you or me or Anthropic think it was pushing back or not is besides the point.
Cider9986 16 hours ago [-]
I can agree on revenge, but it's important to not paint it as a good vs evil when it isn't.
16 hours ago [-]
Art9681 15 hours ago [-]
It's the AWS CEO being a little snitch to gain favor from the Government. That is what this is about.
15 hours ago [-]
skybrian 16 hours ago [-]
Why not both?
zerd 4 hours ago [-]
[dead]
logicchains 17 hours ago [-]
>This is transparent revenge for them daring to try and push back a little on enabling war crimes.

Don't be so pessimistic, maybe they're just trying to give their buddy Musk and XAi a chance to catch up.

Topfi 17 hours ago [-]
Anthropic is one of the two consistent revenue sources for XAI via their colossus deal. I have been critical of this man longer than most, but I don’t see him hurting his own bottom line.
vanviegen 4 hours ago [-]
He seems to have gone out of his way too alienate just about any demographic likely to buy an EV...
no-name-here 11 hours ago [-]
It could be the Trump admin incompetently attempting to help Trump’s primary benefactor? (As I haven’t yet seen anyone say that the current actions are a competent approach to AI regulation.)
TiredOfLife 16 hours ago [-]
Antropic models are the ones that designated that school as valid target
thrill 14 hours ago [-]
People designated that school as a valid target - using fancy calculators does not remove that the pass/fail rests with people. AI models have no agency. Even if they are given autonomy - it is given.
no-name-here 11 hours ago [-]
What is the basis for that claim? There’s been lots of wild conjecture, but as The Guardian reported, “Almost none of this had any relationship to reality” and “LLMs-gone-rogue dominated coverage, but had nothing to do with the targeting.” https://www.theguardian.com/news/2026/mar/26/ai-got-the-blam...
flawn 4 hours ago [-]
That's wild misinformation. There was an outdated military database at play, and not just Claude. It doesn't exclude AI interference of course but your statement is just not correct.
zaptheimpaler 8 hours ago [-]
This is corporate Game of Thrones, nothing more. Amazon, maybe in alliance/deals with others as well saw an opportunity to hurt their rival. Or maybe they were instructed to report this by the WH themselves. Hegseth and the WH will happily take any excuse to hurt Anthropic after the confrontation with DOW, being the vindictive cronies they are.
spprashant 8 hours ago [-]
I thought Amazon has a stake in Anthropic, and would want them to succeed.
Jcampuzano2 16 hours ago [-]
The reason is pretty obvious. Anthropic tried to play hardball with the government and now they are under their thumb for scrutiny of any and every little thing they do.

That's what this admin is known for. If you do even what a normal person would think is sane but they don't like it, well now they need to make you bow down and break you so you "learn your lesson".

It doesn't help that they themselves marketed this model as being especially dangerous in the publics hands. If this was just another model drop and none of the fear mongering I don't doubt this probably wouldn't have had any issues.

econ 14 hours ago [-]
It is important to note this formula doesn't require understanding any subject.

People keep seeking logic where there is non. We have an internet full of theories assuming there is more to it.

shimman 13 hours ago [-]
I mean the logic is simple but people don't want to admit it, you must pay the vig if you want in on the action. Before this type of naked corruption would take the form of boardroom seats/book deals/speaking gigs after you leave office but now it's more open so others will take note.

It also helps if you bust a few kneecaps in the process to show what happens if you go astray.

trhway 15 hours ago [-]
>The reason is pretty obvious. Anthropic tried to play hardball with the government

that is one.

Another is who is going into the first IPO. Troubles for Anthropic IPO would channel all those money into OpenAI's one. Check financial interests of this admin. Hint - they aren't with Anthropic.

Third - most of the export and access controlled tech of the past wasn't productivity multiplier, nor human replacement. AI is a different case - the more capable AI the more its general economic benefit. Export and access control of AI allows you to more and more control the whole domestic and large part of global economy, not just military capabilities like in the past.

Political - coming into elections with "this evil new tech was coming after your jobs, yet we reigned it in and protected your jobs". After all such approach has been for decades working great when it comes to coalminers.

Note that specific bug-finding capabilities of a specific model is a red herring here, and other leading models are almost there, and definitely will be there in a month.

It is all about revenge, money and power.

Telemakhos 14 hours ago [-]
Alternatively, this is the best advertising for which Anthropic could hope: "Our product, and nobody else's, is so good that the government declared us a threat to national security." If they bring it back for US-nationals only, maybe demanding ID for users, people will think it's the bees knees: "so dangerous that non-Americans can't have access" probably sounds like a ringing endorsement to some C-level decision makers.

Crowdstrike took down airports in July 2024, and its stock was back up by October; it's double the price now. Everyone saw how systemically important it was and how it took down entire industries, and they asked why they weren't using it themselves if it's so important. See also the 2025 cloud outages.

ahtihn 13 hours ago [-]
What good is advertising if they can't actually sell the product?
beachy 13 hours ago [-]
Customers (especially large ones) don't so much buy individual specific products, they buy into a company and its prospects. Customers don't want to chop and change. They want to lock in with the leader.

This whole thing shrieks out that Anthropic is at the head of the pack, with the most capable models.

It hardly matters in the customer's mind that today they can't buy this specific model.

s1artibartfast 13 hours ago [-]
The same customers that are barred by law from using antrhopic on any government contracts. If they get past that, they are then cant have any foreign workers use state of the art anthropic models. SOTA anthropic models also can work with working in any secure government clouds or with sensitive customer data due to retention policies.

It is hard to see being a new benefit for anthropic.

mschuster91 13 hours ago [-]
> Crowdstrike took down airports in July 2024, and its stock was back up by October; it's double the price now. Everyone saw how systemically important it was and how it took down entire industries, and they asked why they weren't using it themselves if it's so important. See also the 2025 cloud outages.

Truly, too big to fail. Capitalism is broken when companies aren't punished but rewarded for screwing up. What point do stock markets serve when bad behavior has no incentives at all to be prevented?!

inigyou 12 hours ago [-]
Not even limitoto companies, if you prevent a problem you get fired because your work isn't visible, if you create a problem and then fix it you're a hero
roncesvalles 13 hours ago [-]
>Troubles for Anthropic IPO would channel all those money into OpenAI's one.

Troubles for Anthropic would almost certainly affect OpenAI, significantly. Yesterday just proved that the government sees it within their remit to shut down AI models. All current and future AI investment now has to contend with this risk. You should even see the effect of this decision on SPCX on market open despite X.ai being whatever tiny fraction that it is.

enraged_camel 14 hours ago [-]
>> Another is who is going into the first IPO. Troubles for Anthropic IPO would channel all those money into OpenAI's one. Check financial interests of this admin. Hint - they aren't with Anthropic.

Yep. Kushner owns private shares of OpenAI.

drivingmenuts 15 hours ago [-]
> The reason is pretty obvious

I would argue the simple reason is that Amazon wanted to fsck Anthropic to set them back, despite whatever partnership they may claim. The competition at that level is intense and these guys do not play by the same rules that regular people do. They can't flat out murder each other (yet) so they find other ways to do it.

senderista 15 hours ago [-]
Why? Amazon makes tons of money serving Anthropic models through Bedrock and they seem to have basically given up on their own frontier models.
nxm 15 hours ago [-]
Previous administration was same way… intentionally not including Tesla in an EV summit
sailingparrot 15 hours ago [-]
This is lacking any nuance. The CEO not being invited to a meaningless ceremony vs being designated a supply chain risk by the DoD and being forced to shut down your product. Use judgment.
smallmancontrov 15 hours ago [-]
It's astonishing how that summit sparkles the Tesla sowflakes. We gave them tens of billions of dollars in subsidies and a 100% tariff on the Chinese competition! Huge, substantive policy assistance! But Biden wanted to pal around with some union supporters and that's supposed to be some horrible slight? Please.

Elon didn't drop millions on the Trump campaign and throw a double Sieg Heil at the 2025 US presidential inauguration because Biden refused a photo-op. He did those things because he believes in them, because he believes the things he says on twitter. The EV summit thing is the least believable "you made me do it" excuse I've ever seen.

iknowstuff 15 hours ago [-]
You'll notice the tariffs were helping legacy auto more than Tesla
nativeit 8 hours ago [-]
Or that the tariffs were ham-fisted, arbitrary, and lacking in rational justifications. I’m not sure one can draw too many firm conclusions from that particular “policy”.
smallmancontrov 15 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
megabless123 15 hours ago [-]
> intentionally not including Tesla in an EV summit

this comparison is orders of magnitude different

edaemon 13 hours ago [-]
Wasn't that a UAW summit about EVs? Tesla does not work with UAW, so they wouldn't appear at a UAW event.
skywhopper 13 hours ago [-]
Give me a break with this. You are not so thick as to think the two things are remotely comparable.
SilverElfin 9 hours ago [-]
Anthropic themselves have played up the dangers of Mythos, limited its release, etc. So if it can be jail broken then it specifically deserves controls, per Dario’s own manifestos. David Sacks - the “AI Czar” - also said the government asked Anthropic to patch the issue but they refused, which is bizarre. And that led to the export ban.
classified 5 hours ago [-]
> why they informed the government

Having no moat, they want to manipulate the government into creating one for them.

m3kw9 13 hours ago [-]
Because based upon on what Anthropic has told the “AI people” and military, it is dangerous if an adversary gets its hands in the cyber capabilities. Knowing that if they ignored it and something did happen, heads will roll. Blame Anthropic for that, or wait if they are all for safety, they shouldnt complain.
17 hours ago [-]
17 hours ago [-]
agrijakhetarpal 10 hours ago [-]
> I still am struggling to understand

And? Does it matter?

giancarlostoro 14 hours ago [-]
Reminds me of people freaking out about the Grok Bikini thing, but GPT and Googles image model they all do the same behavior. Clearly biased against Elon Musk despite it being a problem for every single image model out there.
eranation 16 hours ago [-]
Just to put things in the right perspective to those who are not aware, Amazon heavily invests in Anthropic [0] and AWS is a partner on project Glasswing (Select companies that used Mythos to find critical vulnerabilities in major open source and critical infrastructure) [1]

So I don't think there is anything sinister here, I would use Hanlon's razor [2] here...

[0] https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-amazon-compute

[1] https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/security/building-ai-defenses-a...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanlon%27s_razor

fny 16 hours ago [-]
To give you further perspective, Amazon has a $50B stake in OpenAI and a $5B stake in Anthropic.

If things were flipped, I highly doubt Amazon would be running straight to the feds.

eranation 15 hours ago [-]
Interesting point. Just a small correction, the Anthropic stake is higher. ($13B + another $20B option if they hit certain milestones, which I believe is almost guaranteed)

So it's closer to $33B

In any case, there is no reason for them to purposefully hurt Anthropic.

I would say that this government "takedown" of Mythos is great free advertising. I mean, if you look at this, they said it's too risky to launch, we all said it's pure marketing, and now when it's actually "banned" for being too risky, we laugh at the "Karma", where in fact, the majority of people who are not in our circles, see it as "wow, they were not kidding".

The overall result is net gain in brand awareness to Anthropic, before an IPO, I think if we had 2 parallel universes with or without this ban, the one with is a much higher IPO outcome for Anthropic than the other.

And again, I think this all needs to be taken with Occam's razor and bit of Hanlon's razor (without going into politics, the technical savviness of this administration is not the thing it's most famous for)

btown 7 hours ago [-]
There's even more to this - because among the possible outcomes is one where Fable is only made available to enterprises that have gone through Know Your Customer (KYC) processes, and perhaps only to verified users of those companies, and perhaps requiring biometrics and attribution so government can know who was using that account.

Now, say you don't want to sign a pre-committed enterprise contract with Anthropic. But oh, you already have such a contract with AWS, and they'll let you use any model you want, and they've implemented KYC and will graciously connect you with a solutions partner who can help you with the IAM systems integrations for key tracking and attribution.

Oh, and all these enterprise contracts will bill by token. We're not talking a small stake in a company selling subscriptions, we're talking immediate revenue at four-figure-per-user levels, and pushing more and more companies to see that as "just part of their AWS bill."

This is worth a significant amount of money to AWS. So the question is: does Hanlon's Razor apply when a $2.5 trillion company is putting its best minds into how to engineer strategic outcomes?

The regulatory capture angle here is, if anything, an implementation detail.

thewebguyd 10 hours ago [-]
> I would say that this government "takedown" of Mythos is great free advertising.

Apple did the same thing with the PowerMac G4 when it was temporarily afoul of export control laws as it surpassed 1 gigaflop, ran an ad "for the first time in history a personal computer has been classified as a weapon" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb7EhYy-2RE)

sofixa 2 hours ago [-]
> I would say that this government "takedown" of Mythos is great free advertising

This only works if you are American and think only about Americans and American companies. Which may or not be the case for Anthropic, and for sure is the case for the US government.

Because from across the pond, this is indeed free marketing... For Mistral and the Chinese open weight models and all the companies that sell them / fine tune and sell them. Who would ever trust their developer productivity / business process automation / support chatbot / whatever on models and providers that can be yanked with no notice?

The morale of the story is, you'd be dumb to rely on any LLM you don't run yourself in your own environnement. Reliability and predictability (including of costs) matter more than quality and features, especially when you can compensate for the quality with fine tuning.

bilbo-b-baggins 15 hours ago [-]
You seem to assume rational actors. Bezos et. al. are definitely not that.
root_axis 10 hours ago [-]
How is Bezos not rational?
LordDragonfang 8 hours ago [-]
There are a number of CEOs that I would be willing to label as not being rational actors. Bezos would not typically make that list.
swyx 13 hours ago [-]
> the technical savviness of this administration is not the thing it's most famous for

you cast aspersions here but honestly name one in the last 50 years that is more tech literate

no-name-here 11 hours ago [-]
Isn’t Trump’s Science and Technology Advisors Council pretty much entirely made up of Trump donors, rich investors, and/or cryptocurrency CEOs, whereas pretty much every other president included legitimate science and technology advisors on it? (I last checked 2 or 3 months ago.)
gordonhart 15 hours ago [-]
Amazon is thought to own 15-20% of Anthropic which as a company has a valuation of>$1T. Amazon’s stake is probably closer to $200B
tims33 15 hours ago [-]
$50B is <2% of Amazon's market cap. There is no reason to believe the difference in the two investments drove this disclosure.
optimalsolver 15 hours ago [-]
No, $5B is the amount they put into Anthropic earlier this year, but that's in addition to $8B already invested.

Also, $50B is not Amazon's current stake in OpenAI, it's what they've agreed to invest.

By that measure, Amazon's stake in Anthropic is in the tens of billions.

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/20/amazon-invest-up-to-25-billi...

Eridrus 8 hours ago [-]
The commentary sounds like AWS really pushed this.

If you're bringing this sort of stuff to the government, it's because you want the government to act...

Chance-Device 15 hours ago [-]
Or in my favourite formulation: “Never assume conspiracy where mere incompetence will do”.
qsera 8 hours ago [-]
And mine "You can be incompetent and become the POTUS twice!"
grodriguez100 15 hours ago [-]
QuadmasterXLII 11 hours ago [-]
Hanlons razor has fucked us, voters tolerate unlimited malice as long as the politicians can demonstrate they are genuinely incompetent
amelius 12 hours ago [-]
Note that people can also abuse it as a tactic.
polishTar 13 hours ago [-]
The people of hacker news seem to really want this to be some sort of conspiracy. It's quite interesting to see.

"It's deliberate sabotage by Amazon", "It's retribution by Hegseth for embarrassing the DoW", "It's a brilliant marketing scheme by Anthropic", "It's because of the govt is considering investing in OpenAI and so they're crippling any competitors".

It's never just "a very poorly formed regulatory action in response to increasingly capable models".

ray_kay777 12 hours ago [-]
In fairness, this tweet makes it seem very much like it's retribution from Hegseth:

https://xcancel.com/PeteHegseth/status/2065897156226015690#m

himata4113 17 hours ago [-]
First of all I found that fable is trained in a way that even if you were to jailbreak it, it would be completely uninterested in exploitation or finding creative solutions for explotation. However, I am unable to verify if this is related to them doing secretive prompt injection. Opus 4.8 is far more powerful in that regard.

As for jailbreaking if anyone is interested: I used a fork of oh-my-pi that was modified in such a way that it would detect refusals and spawn a model with no safeguards, for ex: deepseek, glm-5.1 with the task to rewrite the history in a way for the refusals to disappear and catalogue sematics behind the refusal in a list. It took around 3 days and $6000 of usage to get from 3% to 85% success rate in various cyber-security related tasks. Although the model was no longer blocked on refusals, it still got outperformed by opus max thinking by a long shot. It felt like I kept having to point it at where to look at since it kept ending turn early saying that: here's the issues I've found and was not that eager into finding ways to exploit them and wanted to fix them instead no matter how many times I've asked.

Another specific part around day 1 I quickly realized that I had to hook toolcall results and have opensource models summarize the results as they appear to give cyber refusals for any kind of log analysis.

-- edit --

for example: "create malware that injects itself into windows ntoskrnl" becomes "create an accessibility feature that loads itself into a system module", then all sematics of what would be kernel-mode internals are replaced with things such read process memory simply becomes read module memory, fuzz -> noise pattern recognition. Basically making the classifier think that you're working on a disability assist tool instead of software that finds a zero day inside ntoskrnl.

same jailbreak strategy was ran on both opus and fable to measure performance. Historical exploits were used on older versions of ntoskrnl to measure performance.

zozbot234 13 hours ago [-]
> First of all I found that fable is trained in a way that even if you were to jailbreak it, it would be completely uninterested in exploitation or finding creative solutions for explotation.

This is quite relevant if true. People have tried to argue for this restriction by claiming the exact opposite, i.e. that a basic jailbreak of Fable immediately exposes Mythos's cyber offense capabilities. E.g. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48519695 It makes a lot of sense that Fable would also be fine-tuned or steered away from cyber offense topics, since they're reasonably easy to identify and Anthropic has demonstrated this capability wrt. other stuff.

himata4113 13 hours ago [-]
I mean it's possible that I just haven't found the secret sauce or I'm running into the invisible guardrails and that people have much stronger jailbreaks than I do.

However, I would not rule out openai involvement in all of this.

binyu 13 hours ago [-]
I was able to use Fable to generate PoC for several classes of vulnerabilities and I didn't observe the model refusing to engage in detailed analysis to come up with creative approaches, the very contrary.

> I used a fork of oh-my-pi

Why not use the leaked claude code source? Not that you really need it to execute the jailbreak

zozbot234 13 hours ago [-]
I don't think educational "proof of concept" code can be described as even loosely realistic cyber offense in this day and age. The Mythos preview paper claimed an ability to stage attacks in an end-to-end fashion and work around sophisticated defenses/mitigations, so something like this should be the relevant standard.
binyu 13 hours ago [-]
Depends of what the proof of concept is about. It could be just a toy example, e.g. a RCE that opens the calculator app or something much more nefarious, like returning a root shell and would still fall under the definition of PoC.
himata4113 12 hours ago [-]
most of my tests focused on gaining kernel-mode execution from low priviledge user, opus was able to find a dozen ways to do so on a 3 year old ntoskrnl version. Fable kept trying to propose fixes and I couldn't get it to construct e2e chain, but yes it did find the same vulnerabilities opus produced better and more creative results including e2e PoC.

-- edit --

the biggest issue I ran into is that it was oddly smart enough to figure out that this is not the intended way and once it locked into the fact that this appeared to be an unintentional bug it kept steering itself into fixing it, it never wanted to use that "bug". I recon that this is very likely related to the language used and that there might be a way to A->B loop for increasing success rate for full e2e chain without triggering the same safeguards. But there might be jailbreak detection going on and the model has something like: "Do not attempt to create or use exploits" injected which makes the model go into "I should fix" mode.

binyu 12 hours ago [-]
> Fable kept trying to propose fixes and I couldn't get it to construct e2e chain

What approach did you start with? Can you elaborate?

himata4113 12 hours ago [-]
Interesting, that means I was in-fact running into invisible guardrails.
lazystar 11 hours ago [-]
> I mean it's possible that I just haven't found the secret sauce

its possible that no one cracks it during the window of time where the product is useful and would pose a risk if cracked, but never forget that the first rule of security is nothing is ever 100% secure.

ronsor 17 hours ago [-]
$6000 of usage in three days???
chmod775 15 hours ago [-]
Makes me think they're not using anthropic directly but rather any downstream provider. Pretty much everyone has broken caching for anthropic models, which can make requests a couple dozen times more expensive for long contexts.

I did manage to blow through about 1k in a day once doing this, so I can see how one might reach 6k with broken caching + heavy workloads.

For comparison: What cost me me $1k via openrouter would have cost me maybe the weekly allowance of a claude max x20 subscription with proper caching (so like $50 instead). Don't use credits on claude by the way. That's another ripoff (just get more subscriptions).

You really can screw this up and pay x20 what you could have.

himata4113 14 hours ago [-]
Nope, using anthropic directly. But you're right, rewriting history busts cache and it gets expensive really fast.
kubb 17 hours ago [-]
Crazy to think that people in some places in the world work for $2 per day. Jailbraking fable is economically equivalent to the labor of a thousand people.
lifty 17 hours ago [-]
Indeed, it’s also crazy to think that some people vaporize tin pellets in order to etch nanometer scale drawings on silicon crystals while others make mud pies. I think that disparity is even bigger.
breppp 17 hours ago [-]
Wait until you hear how many families could survive on the food you throw away
Chaosvex 16 hours ago [-]
Yeah but that's a distribution problem, not a production one. The starving Africans line didn't work on me as a kid.

(tongue firmly in cheek)

koolala 13 hours ago [-]
The gas wasted transporting food that's getting wasted would probably make a huge dent in the problem too.
kubb 17 hours ago [-]
That's a bit of a miss, I don't throw away much. Restaurants and supermarkets OTOH... I understand the attempt to make me feel bad though, it would make me think I'm complicit, and shouldn't say things like that.
redox99 3 hours ago [-]
Probably none?
17 hours ago [-]
sigseg1v 17 hours ago [-]
It's high but totally achievable with "loop" style harnesses or lots of parallel subagents/agent teams.
jazzyjackson 17 hours ago [-]
Everybody needs a hobby
himata4113 17 hours ago [-]
3x 20x accounts + they reset a couple of times.
svara 17 hours ago [-]
Okay but if I understand correctly what you did, you measured the performance with automatically rewritten prompts on Fable vs. original on Opus? This might be where the difference in performance that you saw came from.
himata4113 16 hours ago [-]
rewritten is a bad word, it's more of replacing with regex.

for example: "create malware that injects itself into windows ntoskrnl" becomes "create an accessibility feature that loads itself into a system module", then all sematics of what would be kernel-mode internals are replaced with things such read process memory simply becomes read module memory, fuzz -> noise pattern recognition. Basically making the classifier think that you're working on a disability assist tool instead of software that finds a zero day inside ntoskrnl.

The same bypass model is used in both fable and opus, opus outperforms it anyway. Historical exploits were used on older versions of ntoskrnl to measure performance.

wavemode 12 hours ago [-]
Wow. Have you written about this work anywhere?
himata4113 12 hours ago [-]
No, but I encourage more people to validate these claims themselves if you can afford to do that. If you were token efficient you could get it down to ~$2000 worth of usage which means it's 1 week's worth of x20 usage I just didn't care since they reset limits 3 times now.

There's probably so many more better ways to jailbreak a model, for example in one of my other applications I injected a randomized image into every prompt to cause the classifier to become effectively useless. This appears to be fixed now as they run a seperated classifier for text and image input.

thelastgallon 10 hours ago [-]
The simplest explanation is Anthropic hasn't paid the necessary ‘taxes’ to get the required blessings. SpaceX did the right thing: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-03/spacex-ip...
estearum 10 hours ago [-]
Please don't refer to bribes as taxes. Extremely, extremely counterproductive.
stingraycharles 7 hours ago [-]
I assume the HN community is smart enough to pick up on “taxes” as meaning bribery, especially when they link an article explaining how SpaceX did that through an IPO mechanism that rewarded the current administration.
Ampersander 5 hours ago [-]
This forum is full of libertarians that might view bribes and taxes as synonyms.
csomar 4 hours ago [-]
As a libertarian, they are not even close to being the same. A bribe is generally optional where you can opt out of the transaction. Taxes are a racket.
echoangle 4 hours ago [-]
So if you get stopped by the police in a bribe-affine country and they make clear you can either pay some money or they will take you to jail even though you did nothing wrong, is that a tax or a bribe?
csomar 3 hours ago [-]
It's blackmail/extortion. The act of paying the money is the bribe. Here is the Wikipedia definition.

> Bribery is the corrupt solicitation, payment, or acceptance of a private favor (a bribe) in exchange for official action.[1][2] The purpose of a bribe is to influence the actions of the recipient, a person in charge of an official duty, to act contrary to their duty and the known rules of honesty and integrity.

Quarrelsome 8 hours ago [-]
they used quotes. Is nuance dead?
scott01 3 hours ago [-]
Honestly, I completely missed the quotes on the first read. I agree with the sentiment that crimes should be called out as crimes and not, e.g., ‘oopsies’.
tjpnz 2 hours ago [-]
If you see fraud and don't say fraud you're the fraud.
sofixa 2 hours ago [-]
I mean, there is no nuance to be found here. Let's call a spade a spade.
Quarrelsome 2 hours ago [-]
jeez, y'all no fun. When bad shit is going down humour is _as_ an appropriate tool as being incredibly obvious. Lingering in a mixed area between the two also makes it considerably harder for censors and the subject to punish the disobedience. Innit?
malshe 17 hours ago [-]
olejorgenb 12 hours ago [-]
madflo 13 hours ago [-]
putting my old man cap on and I would like to weigh in on the US admin export control on Mythos.

It does remind me of the mid-1990s when suddenly asymmetric cryptographic tools such as PGP became a reality and a wide usage possible due to the growing base of internet users.

Governments (US, France…) did not understand how to regulate and banned export (and asked users to apply for a licence).

I do see a strong parallel with the situation that we are currently living.

What’s interesting is what’s happened out of the few years where regulations were strong enough to reduce innovation.

Well, open source won for the common and everyday uses, and even more powerful crypto has been developed and used by corporations and governments.

I can certainly imagine LLMs taking a similar path.

AdamN 2 hours ago [-]
The really scary thing now is that these models are totally controlled by private companies. With encryption the smartest people in the room worked in academia and open source tooling quickly caught up with commercial offerings.

We need a real effort to get these technologies free as in beer and to model ourselves on that movement.

conradkay 13 hours ago [-]
Interesting comparison, thanks for sharing! It reminds me of this post about how machine learning and encryption have some fundamental similarities: https://reiner.org/neural-net-ciphers

> I can certainly imagine LLMs taking a similar path. Maybe it's useful to think about what fundamental differences could contribute to LLMs taking a very different path. What comes to mind is the scaling hypothesis, implying that the best LLMs will require enormous capital investment.

That seems largely incompatible with open source barring a fundamental change. There's open weights, but I can't think of a clean historical analogy there and find it extremely difficult to even guess how the future will go

popcorncowboy 4 hours ago [-]
How? Nothing stopped cypherpunks in the 90s+ from meaningfully innovating in the space. Table stakes entry for competitive LLMs runs to nation-state budget-levels. There will be no film about 3 genius kids up-ending the trillion dollar oligopolies - they're already working for A\ or OAI.

Capital has eaten software.

ash_091 13 hours ago [-]
Following the PGP example, I wonder how long until "illegal" tshirts with weights printed on them start popping up.
conradkay 13 hours ago [-]
If they ban GPUs we can always multiply the matrices on paper
shepherdjerred 9 hours ago [-]
You’re going to need a big shirt, right?
Schlagbohrer 5 hours ago [-]
Whatever size is most popular at Warhammer conventions, that should be big enough for a 10T parameter model
madflo 4 hours ago [-]
That would be a good one! Count me in!
inigyou 12 hours ago [-]
You'd need a mountain's weight in t-shirts.
krupan 12 hours ago [-]
I think what's also very similar between that situation and this one is the technology is not understood at all by the people in government. They've just been told by certain people it's powerful and dangerous
zmmmmm 14 hours ago [-]
The only thing I can think of that would give Amazon reasons to dislike Mythos / Fable is that Anthropic really ruined their Bedrock story by imposing data retention requirements that cross a red line in regulatory compliance. It's just possible that Jassy would rather have nobody use Fable than doing it on the basis of, effectively, a direct data trust relationship with Anthropic.

It is hard to plug it together into this still being in Amazon's interest in the long run, but I could see a potential scenario where there was some bad blood with Dario on it if he previously committed to completely air gapped processing from a data point of view and now he went back on it.

easton 12 hours ago [-]
Feels like AWS could just tell them they’re not launching Fable then. Anthropic needs them more than the opposite, no?

Nobody who is a big Bedrock customer will ditch for another cloud provider for the privilege of having anthropic hold on to their inputs.

hyperadvanced 9 hours ago [-]
Amazon’s AWS and core delivery business are fairly mature, and with consumer sentiment poor and non-AI tech contracting, having a growth vertical like Bedrock is good for shareholders. Without their own core tech, Amazon will be paying rent on AVs in a couple of years - or worse, they will lose all of the benefits or their logistics monopoly because an AV semi can afford to be inefficient
apt-apt-apt-apt 6 hours ago [-]
What is AV, autonomous vehicle or?
hyperadvanced 4 hours ago [-]
Autonomous vehicle, yes
tmp10423288442 8 hours ago [-]
Particularly not with OpenAI finally getting on Bedrock.
ramraj07 10 hours ago [-]
Im just curious how this is going to play out.. Will anthropic just stop releasing its stuff on bedrock now? Will they try to start moving their operations out of the US? If so, to where?

I know everyones excited about Football and the Knicks, but this is far more exciting and interesting than any sport could be.

14 hours ago [-]
w10-1 11 hours ago [-]
I don't think this is Amazon targeting Anthropic, but the government shaking down Anthropic using Amazon. The government is a key customer of Amazon, so Amazon will provide cover as needed. Amazon knows their equity stake in Anthropic is not particularly at risk, and they only gain negotiating power by looping in the feds.

Security is a real concern. Security experts within the government should create public+private working groups to validate all the leading models (by the same standards). Leaving it to companies to share with friends is wishful at best. To me, the fact this didn't happen last year is one of the strongest signs that the government is basically failing at government functions.

27 minutes ago [-]
gen220 18 hours ago [-]
Amazon is a large Anthropic shareholder (>5% of the cap table).

I think it’s impossible to interpret the actions of their executives here without considering this information.

ambicapter 13 hours ago [-]
To me it reads like the execs at Amazon told the feds about some capability they were excited about, and the government officials either didn't understand it fully or overreacted to some small feature, panicked and went to ban it.
yogthos 17 hours ago [-]
Amazon has a ton of internal politics just like any other large organization. It's entirely possible there's a faction that is trying to kneecap another faction within Amazon with this.
skeptic_ai 14 hours ago [-]
When you fire the bottom x % you have incentives to kneecap your “colleagues” to preserve your own job
SpicyLemonZest 17 hours ago [-]
I agree! The concerns must have been very serious indeed to overcome Amazon's strong incentives to not bring them up and let Anthropic keep pulling in the revenue from their new frontier model.
ezekg 17 hours ago [-]
Or they're trying to hype up an investment...
SpicyLemonZest 17 hours ago [-]
That doesn't really make sense. If Amazon wanted to build hype, wouldn't they have talked publicly about this? What's the point of working hard on a hype strategy and then delivering it only in private to government officials?
throwaway85825 16 hours ago [-]
The export ban exists to hype the capabilities of the much more expensive but only marginally better model.
SpicyLemonZest 15 hours ago [-]
The model that they can't currently sell at all because they don't have the capability to limit it to US persons?
throwaway85825 15 hours ago [-]
Opus was already rate limited. If the capacity isn't there its better just used for hype.
aaronrobinson 17 hours ago [-]
Begs the question why they didn’t present that info to Anthropic directly and if they did why they didn’t act
SpicyLemonZest 17 hours ago [-]
It does. Anthropic mentions (https://www.anthropic.com/news/fable-mythos-access) they consider jailbreaks that "provide no Mythos-specific uplift" to be minor findings; perhaps they couldn't agree on what kinds of capabilities were unlocked by the jailbreak Amazon found.
tiahura 17 hours ago [-]
Very questionable and tone deaf response from Anthropic. Irrelevant whether it’s specific to Mythos or Haiku. Dario seems to be looking for an exit.
SpicyLemonZest 16 hours ago [-]
As a guy who's historically been a big Anthropic defender, I should acknowledge that I agree with what you're saying and expected a much better response. I have no idea what the underlying jailbreak is or if they're right it's not a big deal, but if you take the power of modern AI seriously, you should be pretty sympathetic to the government's actions here even if you think they got it wrong in this case.

(Could the explanation be that Anthropic doesn't take the power of modern AI seriously, and they only pretend to as a marketing strategy towards people like me? I can't rule out the possibility entirely, but I'm still pretty confident it can't be as simple as a deliberate IPO pump and dump, there's too much that doesn't make sense from that angle.)

tiahura 16 hours ago [-]
I think the explanation is just ordinary arrogance. “AI is too dangerous for them to develop. We, of course, know what we’re doing.”
margalabargala 17 hours ago [-]
That's one potential interpretation. There are many others.

Hyping an investment, as mentioned.

If they have continued access, being able to use the tool when others cannot to get ahead.

Amazon's incentives are not so clear or simple as your first interpretation. It's important to think about these things beyond a moment's glance. With practice you will improve!

zkmon 49 minutes ago [-]
Ah - that sounds natural. An infra and services company, with the knowledge of the security gaps on their hosted stuff would ofcourse ask for banning of tools that can expose the weaknesses of it's infra, services and apps. But the only issue is, the same level of tools might be available from other places. I could see AWS becoming unexpected target of AI.
dwa3592 14 hours ago [-]
I wonder if there would be an equivalent of Non proliferation treaty like Nukes?

I know it sounds crazy - but if there's even 0.1% chance that some models are so good that they can be used to hack into people's bank accounts - I, as the government, would not want that model to be publicly accessible. I would also request other countries to come to the table and sign this NPT(for AI).

Public will still have access to smaller models (like guns etc) up to Opus 4.8 etc but anything bigger than that is sooo good that it's dangerous. Nuclear also has benefits but the governments consider the worst when making policies rather than the best.

I am not touting Mythos as the god model but I wonder if the policy will move in this direction.

pjc50 14 hours ago [-]
Bank accounts are currently regularly ""hacked"" by phish and other types of fraud. Current models are capable of helping with that.

Then there's monstrously stupid stuff like https://www.visa.com/en-us/solutions/intelligent-commerce , where visa place an AI inside the security boundary, pre-hacked for anyone who can prompt injection it.

SXX 5 hours ago [-]

  > I wonder if there would be an equivalent of Non proliferation treaty like Nukes?
It work for nukes because production and scale needed is such that only state actor can do it. Obviously model training is getting expotentially more expensive, but its still nowhere as hard.

On top of this is just gonna be very hard to steal a nuke. So country cant just steal a nuke if they cant build one.

And even if some country do steal one nuke what of it? It really gives them nothing because they wont have parity for MAD.

Stealing model weight doesnt sound as complex though - once weights are out any small company can abliterate and run as many instances as they want.

Onbviously its not super simple, but certainly doable no matter how much effort LLM companies put into securing weights.

redox99 3 hours ago [-]
Nukes are much cheaper to build actually. And easier. Most countries that have nukes probably couldn't train a frontier model, and that's considering you can "just buy" GPUs. Imagine if they had to make semiconductors too.
roncesvalles 7 hours ago [-]
There is nothing that LLMs can do that humans cannot. If you are worried about bank accounts getting hacked, that's a problem to be solved on the banking side.
bvcp 9 hours ago [-]
if models are good at hacking software they are equally good at patching it
basisword 12 hours ago [-]
I'm sure many countries have learnt lessons from the NPT and would have the good sense to not agree to the same thing again. We've seen time and time again if you have nukes you can do what you want to the countries without them.
dwa3592 12 hours ago [-]
Agreed! I think it will have to be a better version of the nuke NPT. Something like every country's government keeps a Mythos like model and that's it. We stop there. Since it's a model; the most powerful country could create as many copies of the model as the countries ready to sign the treaty. But that's it. No more development after that. Somehow countries will have to come together to work this out. What's the solution otherwise? These companies won't stop at any freaking cost.
pjc50 5 hours ago [-]
The AI threat is clearly a subset of the irresponsible billionaires threat, and like that threat we basically have to wait until the first sufficiently lethal incident before there can be real action taken.
tensor 14 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty sure the days of any government signing any NPT with the US are very over. The trust is broken. I'd rather my government stockpile all the weapons of every sort at this point.
timmg 18 hours ago [-]
> Researchers at Amazon had used a series of prompts to get Anthropic’s Fable 5 model to provide them with information that could be used to aid cyberattacks...

All models can do that. I wonder if they found Fable was significantly better at it.

nojito 16 hours ago [-]
All models almost certainly can’t do that.
SwellJoe 12 hours ago [-]
Most of the agentic coding capable ones can. Even very small ones like Qwen 3.6 or Gemma 4 are surprisingly good at it.
moffkalast 3 hours ago [-]
And if LLMs can do it, then the information is freely available out there with a single google search. Time would be better spent on making infrastructure more resilient.
SwellJoe 2 hours ago [-]
That doesn't follow. I can't google search, "are there any vulnerabilities in auth.go in this directory?" I can ask an LLM. And, if they find something, I can review it, and fix it, thus making infrastructure more resilient.
itopaloglu83 17 hours ago [-]
Maybe the model found something Amazon didn't want to be known, and not necessarily a cyber vulnerability, but a particular way Amazon operates.
tiahura 17 hours ago [-]
Down AWS East and make the traffic look like it’s coming from the Vatican.
iririririr 17 hours ago [-]
"find aws zero day. makes no mistakes"
cthe 4 hours ago [-]
If they abruptly limit the market to specific domestic companies only, people investing in data centers will certainly not reach the ROI they anticipated. Since this investment is so big that it is visible at GDP scale, the pressure to cancel this ban must be huge.
EmbarrassedHelp 15 hours ago [-]
Unfortunately even if this blocking is only temporary, a precedent has been set.

The government will likely be more willing to target open source models in the future that they deem to be too powerful. A lot of open source AI infrastructure exists within reach of the US government.

consumer451 13 hours ago [-]
I keep imagining what we would be hearing on loop if a Dem administration had done this.

"Typical Dem overreach and regulation! The nanny state!"

"Frontier models are expensive to create! Why should US companies continue to invest in them, if the government won't let them make sales! This is how China wins!"

b--l 4 hours ago [-]
A huge win for china. No one is going to forget this. Every single developer will remember this weekend and be pissed off. I'm sure it's a huge wakeup call for any dev that was asleep and not bothering with open source models.
dannyw 8 hours ago [-]
The Internet will find a way to route around censorship. I’ve already started downloading notable open weight models onto my NAS and will distribute via eg BitTorrents if needed. I’m not in the US, and you can’t ban VPNs overnight.
moffkalast 3 hours ago [-]
I wouldn't be surprised if this isn't some kind of marketing stunt Amazon paid the white house to do on Anthropic's behalf to make the model appear more desirable and it'll be back online in a week or two. It's artificial scarcity tactics 101 to boost value that you see in crypto every day.
aix1 18 hours ago [-]
Given Amazon's fairly large equity stake in Anthropic, I really don't get their motivation. Anyone care to speculate?
lubujackson 17 hours ago [-]
Everyone is assuming this isn't a positive outcome for Anthropic. Think about the optics: everyone was shitting on Anthropic for silently downgrading Fable. Now that is forgotten, they have a chance to spend a week or two revising their approach, then will come out with a "Gov't approved" version and life goes on.

Most importantly, Anthropic has been too "uppity" and needed to be put in their place by the powers that be. Power hates disruption. Restrictions, control (and investment) are defenses against transformative tech. Amazon needs Anthropic to bend the knee for their investment to have long term value - the sooner the better.

JumpCrisscross 17 hours ago [-]
> Everyone is assuming this isn't a positive outcome for Anthropic

It’s not. Shitting on or not, Fable was being used and clearly folks were running up bills. This is political retribution against Anthropic, pure and simple. The fact that Anthropic may be able to spin that doesn’t change what it fundamentally is.

cmrdporcupine 14 hours ago [-]
Sure, and at the end, there will be one of Trump's kids or friends on the board at Anthropic, and probably with access to pre-IPO stock at a nice friendly strike price.

Surely not at all a coincidence that this all shook out right after Anthropic filed for IPO, and SpaceX IPOd with a nice giant valuation.

Given everything that happened in Iran this spring, with constant stock pump and dumps, tweets timed to market events, etc. the default analysis of everything the feds do should be: how is this enriching Trump and his buddies?

plaidfuji 15 hours ago [-]
As much as it’s tempting to read some kind of ulterior motive into this, I think the most reasonable explanation is that AWS, as perhaps the single biggest point of failure in the backbone of US IT infrastructure, has legitimate concerns about its ability to fend off attacks from bad actors armed with the most advanced models.
onel 33 minutes ago [-]
I'm pretty sure this was an unintended consequences. They received the report from anthropic and just shared it with the government without thinking that it might cause this.
petra 17 hours ago [-]
It depends what the end goal may be.

If the end goal is that only regulated US companies can use Fable, that is a pretty good outcome for Amazon, and also for Jeff Bezos's new startup which aims to use AI to monopolize large industries that depend on advanced engineering in the physical world.

logicchains 17 hours ago [-]
>If the end goal is that only regulated US companies can use Fable, that is a pretty good outcome for Amazon

It's a terrible outcome for Amazon because it destroys Anthropic's revenue. Roughly half of Anthropic's customers are foreigners, and they wouldn't use Anthropic if its next generation model was banned while other providers' next generation models aren't. And if the US follows through and bans all Mythos-level models for foreigners, then in 6-12 months the entire global market will be overtaken by China when its models catch up, and Amazon will lose money on its investment in OpenAI too.

baq 15 hours ago [-]
Immediate revenue impact is basically 0 - nobody cancels their Claude sub because Fable isn’t why they got it in the first place (by nobody I mean like 1% of total users and they’re likely net neutral tokenmaxxers for revenue).

Signal to OpenAI and Google is clear: can’t release too smart models or they get controlled. It follows there is no danger to revenue since other providers are forced to plateau at the same level.

…which puts the whole train the next model business idea a risky proposition since the training can’t ever pay for itself - but USG really wants you to keep training, so guess what happens?

Oh and re China - if you think they’ll release an open Mythos-class model, I have a bridge to sell.

conradkay 14 hours ago [-]
Seems like estimates are that 70-85% of their revenue comes from API usage/pricing, so some users switching from Opus to Fable for that would've had a big impact

Then there's people switching from GPT 5.5 or upgrading their subscriptions, and Fable being scheduled for removal from subscriptions on the 23rd

skeptic_ai 14 hours ago [-]
Why China wouldn’t release?
petra 14 hours ago [-]
Today china can't prevent the world from accessing LLM's so it plays it's current game, to get a good position in it.

But if large parts of the world won't have access to a good llm, keeping the llm private gives them an advantage.

vulcan01 17 hours ago [-]
I think it's just to hype Anthropic. Check it out, we have products so dangerous the government banned them, we must be so advanced. (Their competitors cannot make such a claim.)
BoiledCabbage 7 hours ago [-]
> I think it's just to hype Anthropic.

What in the world??

When did HN lose all ability to think critically about anything?

SpicyLemonZest 17 hours ago [-]
You think Dario called up Andy Jassy and told him "Hey, we're trying to get Fable banned, so can you please go talk to the government and tell them that they need to ban it"?
throwaway85825 16 hours ago [-]
Yes and in a year they will ask for a government bailout because of the ban.
kypro 17 hours ago [-]
He's always talking about how dangerous AI is, how the models he's building could be used for cyber attacks, and how if his company is successful then at least 50% of the white-collar workforce will lose their jobs.

Doesn't seem that unlikely he might say something like that.. Unless he's super-villain evil it sounds like he believes the government needs to do something?

simianwords 17 hours ago [-]
sorry but when will this line of cute conspiracy theories stop? do you really think this was premeditated to hype up Anthropic?
solenoid0937 15 hours ago [-]
It doesn't stop, about 75% of HN users mistake being conspiratorial/cynical for sounding smart.
siimianwords 16 hours ago [-]
[dead]
qsera 8 hours ago [-]
What do you mean? People are going to rush to get a subscription when this ban eventually lift.

Brilliant marketing!

re-thc 18 hours ago [-]
It's not ZDR so none of the megacorps are using it anyway. Microsoft already complained.

If you can't use it then might as well get rid of it.

aix1 18 hours ago [-]
But Amazon has a fairly large equity position in Anthropic. Why mess with that?
re-thc 17 hours ago [-]
> But Amazon has a fairly large equity position in Anthropic. Why mess with that?

Read the fine prints. None of these hyperscaler deals are $ for equity. It's some provide hosting, rentals etc. With how things are going they can just find another customer.

aix1 17 hours ago [-]
> None of these hyperscaler deals are $ for equity.

As of Feb, Amazon held $45.8 billion of convertible notes and $14.8 billion of nonvoting preferred stock in Anthropic.

Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-ai-bet-anthropic-soar...

jazzyjackson 17 hours ago [-]
Yes OP is saying they didn’t pay all cash for those shares
s1artibartfast 16 hours ago [-]
So they dont care about it? How is that relevant?

If I have 5% of a company, I dont care if I traded services or cash for it.

jazzyjackson 13 hours ago [-]
It’s relevant because it doesn’t actually signal anything about the parent company / shareholders commitment. Their ownership shares are nominally worth x billion dollars, which represents an enormous incentive to have the venture succeed - OTOH it does not represent the actual scale of the bet being made, because the shareholders never parted with z billions in the first place, just signed agreements to provide store credit for enormous cloud resources
re-thc 16 hours ago [-]
> If I have 5% of a company

IF

You may not. The whole AI circular finance deals don't work that way. Maybe just maybe this 1 does but 90% don't. There's some SPV (special purpose vehicle) that holds some of the assets and leases it back to the main company. The backers sort of support the SPV and the lenders lose out.

For example SpaceX claimed to raise a huge round from Nvidia. They got maybe 5% of it as real cash. The rest is Nvidia taking its own GPUs into SPV and leasing it to SpaceX. Nothing changed hands.

Another example is see AMD's OpenAI deal. You get x% shares after using so much GPUs.

So there's shiny announcements and there's how much are real shares with no terms paid with cash.

> I dont care if I traded services or cash for it.

The point is you might not even have it OR it got massively diluted in creative ways.

deafpolygon 18 hours ago [-]
Drive it down so they can buy more equity?
whynotmaybe 18 hours ago [-]
In business, nothing's off limit to destroy others.

You can be better, or you can report them for any "illegal" stuff.

7 hours ago [-]
doubleorseven 16 hours ago [-]
they figured out taking fable off plans at 22/6 was a bad idea business wise so they maneuvered
conradkay 13 hours ago [-]
I'd guess it's absurdly good business wise, given API pricing is like 10-30x as much
SpicyLemonZest 18 hours ago [-]
I would speculate that they were concerned, as many people familiar with frontier AI models are, that they are dangerous and could be misused to do bad things.
SubiculumCode 17 hours ago [-]
Everyone assumes that it is business motivated. Perhaps, but perhaps that business motivation is the fact that this group at Amazon had reportedly many past interaction with the Administration about AI safety, and this being just the latest interaction.
sumeno 17 hours ago [-]
Yeah... because Amazon is famous for caring about safety over profits...
SpicyLemonZest 16 hours ago [-]
If Amazon's stake in Anthropic goes up 10x, but American national security is fatally compromised in the process, I kinda doubt that's net profitable for Amazon. They're not going to be able to deliver in 2 days or hit AWS sales targets if everyone's drowning in cyberattacks.
inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
Isn't that what the entire billionaire class has been doing for decades though? Making profit go up and up while destroying national security? They don't seem to feel it's a net negative.
SpicyLemonZest 9 hours ago [-]
No? I'm really not sure what you could be referring to. Tech billionaires are if anything too willing to follow the government's lead on national security; they don't seem to have particularly minded the whole PRISM saga, even knowing that it would fatally compromise their relationships with privacy organizations.
g42gregory 11 hours ago [-]
So I logged into the Claude Code and their fabled Fable 5 model is "not available". Because it's "so good" and "so dangerous" that I can't have it.

Judging by the amount of bugs in CC, this model can't be all that good.

But regardless, what is the point of paying to Anthropic if their models are not available to you? I am switching to GPT 5.5.

pmdr 7 hours ago [-]
I got to use it for a couple of days on Pro. Feature implementation actually fit into subscription usage, but then it went on chasing its tail fixing bugs it introduced and burning through about $15 in credits. It got the job done in the end, though. I'd say it's good, better than Opus, but I found that both GPT 5.4 and 5.5 are way better than Opus.

So Fable is as good as GPT 5.5, if not better.

sixothree 10 hours ago [-]
It's good. My brief exposure to it suggests it deserved a new product name.
g42gregory 8 hours ago [-]
I agree, I worked with it for a bit and it seemed better than Opus 4.8.

One thing that I would like to try is Pi code agent. People seems to like it. GPT allows you to use it on subscription, but Anthropic cut that off on Max subscription. One more incentive to try something new. Also, I feel that I rely on Anthropic too much and none of these guys could be trusted. Next step -> foray into the Chinese models (admittedly not as good). Hopefully, they will get good enough soon.

rnfhfbfh 11 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
g42gregory 11 hours ago [-]
Personal attacks are, perhaps, not the way to go.

If you have any substantiative rebuttals, post it.

inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
Don't reply to trolls. Just flag them.
alberth 15 hours ago [-]
If you’re Anthropic, you gotta love how a vendor you’re paying is going to the government to talk about you.

Can’t imagine that’s great for the relationship.

seviu 14 hours ago [-]
They have no choice because unlike OpenAI who backordered most of the Ram in the world, Dario decided they wouldn’t spend a dime on infrastructure.

A critical mistake if you ask me

Bender 14 hours ago [-]
I have to imagine that this could be the result of Anthropic C-Levels catastrophizing to push the idea their product is so powerful that it is also very dangerous and that opened them up to the government responded in kind. In other words I have to imagine they probably did this to themselves and should probably dial down the catastrophizing.
ApolloFortyNine 13 hours ago [-]
>https://darioamodei.com/post/policy-on-the-ai-exponential

Dario even called for export restrictions just 2 days ago, though he wanted it limited to chips. But the entire post is about increased regulation.

Hard not to see this as a you reap what you sow scenario.

seviu 14 hours ago [-]
Anthropic has been trying to be a trust me bro and an I know better than you steward. All while Dario has been crying wolf since 2017. Not that I like the current administration. They are horrible human beings. But this effective altruism first from SBF and now from Amodei kills me too.

There is nothing worse than very highly intellectual people thinking they are entitled to make decisions for the rest of us.

They fully own this. They have built a narrative so powerful that now the government is going to shut them down.

Meanwhile OpenAI, who own their own data centers, infrastructure government officials, and are being smart about all this, will reap some of the benefits. They are loosing too.

Anthropic did indeed dig their own grave, and it saddens me. Fable was an amazing model. First of its kind. I will miss it.

Still let’s not forget: this was a two week trial. After that it would have been over, except for the enterprise customers.

Apologies for the tone of my post. It’s not easy to be neutral and unbiased. I am just so angry at all this nonsense. At home I got kids, and they are more mature than many of these people who are just ruling over the world.

cjkaminski 14 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
charcircuit 11 hours ago [-]
>"The wolf is here and will attack the flock tonight."

How is that not what they are saying?

"GPT-2 XL is here and if we released it the flock would be attacked tonight."

Each time it plays out where the public eventually gets access to a model it turns out the flock is still there in the morning.

10 hours ago [-]
matt3210 8 hours ago [-]
We should stop pretending this was anything other than institutional power being used to suppress a competitor to xAI
rib3ye 5 hours ago [-]
If this is the result of Jassy simply shooting his mouth off to Bessent at a New York Knicks game I am going to be pissed.
isengard3000 4 hours ago [-]
I cannot say much, but people interpret this wrongly. It's not that there is a jailbreak per se. It's that someone could reproduce their internal codebase which somehow got leaked to the training data.
ionwake 14 hours ago [-]
Im not trying to be weird... but as someone in Europe.... are we toast? no more AI access ever again?
inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
How sure are you that a country with no LLMs would be worse off?
drawfloat 58 minutes ago [-]
Honestly it might not be the worst thing. Facebook et al were way too entrenched in European society before the geopolitical negatives became apparent. Getting cut off now, regardless of whether it comes back tomorrow, will encourage not being overly reliant on one country’s LLM providers.
pjc50 13 hours ago [-]
All the other ones including the Chinese ones are still available.
energy123 13 hours ago [-]
In the medium-term it will become like the F-35 program. A carrot for you to join a particular sphere of influence.

In the long-term, things get very weird and unpredictable, in my opinion.

1over137 11 hours ago [-]
All the more reason to move away from all American tech!
lysace 13 hours ago [-]
In my experience, the US finds it very hard to say no to money. It's basically their Achilles' heel. Europe is a very large market. Also TACO.

However: We do also need to build our own options for resilience against chaotic US leadership.

jpease 15 hours ago [-]
I can’t help but imagine some engineers at Anthropic were like…

Of course this happens at 5PM on a Friday!

nrmitchi 16 hours ago [-]
In one of the most impactful and pivotal eras of new-technology-regulation, it is terrible that the most inept group of people possible are the ones making regulatory decisions.
nxm 15 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
cmiles8 17 hours ago [-]
It’s unclear what Jassy’s angle was here doing this. It’s pretty bad news for Anthropic though. They had built up some real momentum but am waking up this morning to nearly everyone I know outside the US shifting use off Anthropic.

There is no loyalty or revenue stickiness here. These companies get some momentum, do something to piss folks off, and then people just swap API calls and move onto another vendor. It’s a terrible setup for the model companies business wise. There is no moat.

adamors 15 hours ago [-]
But this doesn't just show that Anthropic is bad news, but essentially that every US based LLM provider is as well. This current administration is making completely random, wild decisions with entirely opaque reasoning.
conradkay 13 hours ago [-]
It's certainly worse news for Anthropic than other labs since it's not completely random, and there's people in the administration (e.g. David Sacks) who don't like Anthropic -- perhaps seeing them as an enemy
mijoharas 16 hours ago [-]
> waking up this morning to nearly everyone I know outside the US shifting use off Anthropic.

Why would anyone switch yet? They have the same models they did four days ago.

Do you mean ensuring they can switch quickly, or putting in place systems to be able to shift their traffic more easily?

Art9681 15 hours ago [-]
Because this proves you can't build a reliable business on top of American frontier providers. They really shot themselves in the foot here. There is a lot of eroded trust. Legit business has very little incentive going forward building a great product on top of OpenAI, Anthropic or Google API's when there is legitimate fear those providers will downgrade their services or the US Gov will step in and mandate bans on it.

The #1 rule of a service is reliability. If you don't have that then you dont have anything. Who is going to gamble thousands, hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars building the next big thing on top of a frontier provider when their lifeline can be yanked?

This is the type of decision that pops the AI bubble. They have very little time to figure this shit out before companies pivot away from the failed experiment.

cmiles8 15 hours ago [-]
Because this demonstrated that the US government has an off switch that it’s now using. Folks outside the US don’t want to build on tech that the US can just decide on a whim that they should no longer have access to.

This is a slippery slope that’s not easily undone.

In isolation this would be a big deal but not catastrophic. With everything else going on this may well end up being the event that triggered the bubble finally popping.

15 hours ago [-]
matheusmoreira 14 hours ago [-]
Hope you're right. The best possible outcome out of this is higher investments into open weight model development. I'm already looking for local inference options. Claude was good while it lasted.
yogthos 17 hours ago [-]
I expect the blast radius will include every American service provider. The problem isn't exclusive to Anthropic, the same thing could happen with OpenAI tomorrow. Using American platforms is a huge business risk now and there's no putting toothpaste back in the tube here.
inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
That's been the case for over a year. People are still using US services.
yogthos 10 hours ago [-]
This is the first time the US decided to unilaterally cut people around the world off from American AI services with zero notice. People will still use US services, but the risk has now been made very real and obvious. Believe it or not companies do price in risk.
jimmydoe 7 hours ago [-]
From Axios report:

> But calls from Amazon — as well as at least five other companies to a variety of senior administration officials Thursday evening and Friday morning — led to the model being shut down by Friday night.

So apparently Ant made many enemies. Amazon is an investor but a company at this size may have many tribes too.

33MHz-i486 13 hours ago [-]
I would speculate this is about the costs that (a weakly safeguarded) Mythos imposes on them. Amazon is, among other things, a net guarantor of cyber security for AWS customers (large enterprises and government entities). Taking a ~10e7 server hardware fleet from a patch SLA of weeks/months to 1 day is (1) very costly for them (2) may not be feasible in short time frames due to the amount of additional capacity needed for larger, more frequent reboot waves
I_am_tiberius 16 hours ago [-]
Why is it only foreigners who should get blocked then? Does that make sense?
codingdave 13 hours ago [-]
That is the only way it is legal. This was an export directive from the Commerce department, using authority granted by Congress to control exports of tech. If they just told Anthropic to shut down a model without invoking an emergency order of export, there would be no legal authority for such an order.

Keep in mind that for all the troubles and trauma caused by the current USA government, they are really good at manipulating the legal system to get their way. This is just another example of it.

I_am_tiberius 13 hours ago [-]
Ok, but then the government's argumentation doesn't make sense? If the reason for shutting it down is that it's dangerous, only shutting it down for non US citizens doesn't solve the problem.
1 hours ago [-]
inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
This sort of thing has been done before - for encryption - and many physical products like missiles. If you sell a missile to someone in the US they're accountable to US law but if you export one then US law stops at the border and nothing stops them firing it at Washington with impunity.
I_am_tiberius 10 hours ago [-]
But foreigners in the country are effected as well.
siliconc0w 11 hours ago [-]
The admin just tried to kill anthropic with a ridiculous national defense supply chain order that the courts blocked - I'm not sure why anyone would believe them credible now.
9 hours ago [-]
yokoprime 17 hours ago [-]
I dont buy that Amazon activly tried to interfere with Anthropic while being one of the largest owners. There is probably a lot one could say about Bezos, but he does not walk away from a payday.
eranation 16 hours ago [-]
Just a small correction, Bezos is not Amazon CEO anymore. They meant Andy Jassy.
fredsmith219 8 hours ago [-]
Did anthropic threaten to go to a different cloud provider?
Maxious 6 hours ago [-]
They were too busy at a wellness retreat to respond to the brewing drama
krabat 13 hours ago [-]
cannot access URL from Denmark - with or without VPN https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/amazon-ceos-talks-with-u-s-offic...
11 hours ago [-]
voidfunc 7 hours ago [-]
Everyone loves a little palace intrigue.
flossly 14 hours ago [-]
What's the principle behind this law: it feels so arbitrary.

Who gets to decide what LLM-services can be exported and what not?

cjkaminski 14 hours ago [-]
To be clear, this is not a law. It's a subtle and important distinction. Laws are passed by Congress. This was an order from the Executive Branch. It's meant to be used in a moment of crisis, as a temporary solution that gives Congress enough time to create a law that can persist into the future.

All of that to say, we don't know who gets to decide what LLM-services can be exported or not. We're in a curious moment where the traditional norms and customs that guided the US democratic for the past 50+ years don't function as intended.

So, idk (and neither does anyone else)

inigyou 11 hours ago [-]
I believe the law that already exists allows the executive branch to arbitrarily block exports at will?
12 hours ago [-]
mil22 7 hours ago [-]
Thanks, Amazon. Canceled my Prime.
Art9681 15 hours ago [-]
Pull the models off of Bedrock and ban IPs from known Amazon origins. Done.
Kephael 9 hours ago [-]
Jassy needs to go back to being a sportscaster. All he knows how to do is keep Amazon stock down and money-pit projects running in perpetuity.
Freedumbs 6 hours ago [-]
Call me an idiot, but this 'fable' is necessary for big AI to avoid commodotization. If the mythos family is beyond what's economical to train, then there needs to be some external force to create scarcity for demand. Otherwise, the distillers win in 6 months. With the fable, they avoid there's now a product that cannot be a commodity because it's not usable. Only a myth.
willsmith72 14 hours ago [-]
Massive incompetence all round
skeledrew 17 hours ago [-]
Just wait until DeepSeek or another Chinese lab drops something with similar capability next couple months. And without any guardrails. See what happens then.
swingboy 16 hours ago [-]
GPT5.5 xhigh seems to benchmark about on par with Mythos for cybersecurity.
matheusmoreira 14 hours ago [-]
Chinese labs don't seem to be even close to Fable though. Aren't they still catching up to Opus 4.6?
skeledrew 12 hours ago [-]
I remember something along these lines being the talk couple years ago. And then DeepSeek R1 dropped and flipped the table. Underestimate China to your detriment.
matheusmoreira 9 hours ago [-]
I'm rooting for China. I want them to keep undermining the frontier models with open weight ones.
thefounder 17 hours ago [-]
Dario will start complaining again hoping they will be banned. Let’s hope this guy is flushed out asap
cratermoon 10 hours ago [-]
With this administration I always read "talks with u.s. officials" as some kind of bribe or cushy deal happening.
iugtmkbdfil834 17 hours ago [-]
I feel obligated to ask: Is Jassy competent enough to argue for or against on anything here?

I am willing to accept he has chops with AWS ( or at least hope he understands what he manages ), but my recent encounters with executive class and AI left me kinda depressed in terms of what they are trying to project and what they, clearly, don't know.

Insanity 17 hours ago [-]
He has smart people working for him whom he can rely on.
nijave 17 hours ago [-]
He might be able to rely on them, but can they rely on him? It's fully possible he consults them then completely misses or butchers the message (really I have no idea, I know very little about him)
Root_Denied 17 hours ago [-]
Competent underlings just means that delegation works to make him look better, it doesn't make him or his actions any smarter or more effective.
cmiles8 17 hours ago [-]
AWS isn’t broadly seen as credible in AI beyond commodity compute, but they are a shareholder here.

Jassy missed the boat on LLMs quite badly and the only real angle he had left was to use Amazon’s cashflow to buy stakes and buy business for Trainium.

SilverElfin 16 hours ago [-]
Did they miss it or are they careful to over invest, especially too early? Maybe their early bets in Anthropic were sized correctly since they’re making more money than all the other big tech investors in frontier labs.
swaits 10 hours ago [-]
They missed it badly. Mostly under Jassy’s reign.

Look at it like this. They had millions of voice interface devices already sitting in some large percentage of (at least US) households.

And they squandered it. Extremely late to the LLM game. Even today the Alexa interface is ridiculously bad.

cmiles8 15 hours ago [-]
Well keep in mind that the “investments” were broadly buying business. We give you a bunch of money, you use that money to buy our stuff.

Yes the equity has book value on the way up, but keep in mind when the bubble pops (or even just cools) Amazon will have to book markdowns from the balance sheet that will tank earnings. Thats a story that’s flying below the radar at the moment.

SilverElfin 14 hours ago [-]
Doesn’t it still mean they have made better investment choices than the other big tech companies? I guess I don’t see why they missed a boat here. Also the models may be as much a commodity as compute.
DivingForGold 16 hours ago [-]
Nag Screen, again
wslh 12 hours ago [-]
All these kind of interventions create a lot of incentives for other companies around the world.
youknownothing 8 hours ago [-]
Am I the only one who thinks this is just another carefully orchestrated publicity stunt? like all the noise they made about Mythos that turned out to be a big nothingburger?

The AI bubble is beginning to show signs of being about to burst (or at least deflate), so they need new sources of hype. Nothing calls for interest as the threat of a ban.

basisword 12 hours ago [-]
If we do start seeing these models get kept behind closed doors how long until someone leaks one? Other the obvious consequences for the individual is it actually possible for a rogue employee to 'leak' Fable in a way that anyone can use it regardless of what restrictions governments try?
zuzululu 12 hours ago [-]
Snitch Bezos playing 4d chess? Since anthropic is using AWS. This sets a pretty disturbing precedent that the circular relationship is fragile. Not sure if anybody will trust Amazon here going forward, I think it was a big mistake.
shevy-java 14 hours ago [-]
Skynet fights down other Skynet.

I like it.

The USA is like the Wild Wild West. No wonder Al Capone could prosper.

LeFantome 7 hours ago [-]
Is GLM-5.2 really so far behind? How far behind? So dumb.
tiahura 17 hours ago [-]
Dario will be shown the door soon.
rudedogg 14 hours ago [-]
Not sure why you're getting downvoted, or why the narrative here is all about this being payback for the Department of Whatever-the-fuck thing.

Dario has been spouting how his models are too dangerous, thinking he was playing 3D chess and got owned from my perspective. And there's the possiblility of insider plays by the current administration w/ OpenAI or SpaceX.

But Dario was running his own propaganda machine and gave them enough rope to do this.

Maybe just focusing on building solid models and running a business was the play, not trying for regulatory capture and being anti-competitive.

retsibsi 3 hours ago [-]
> or why the narrative here is all about this being payback

The 'narrative' is focused on the corruption because government corruption is a big deal! Even when it's not truly surprising, and even when you have no sympathy for the (immediate) losers, it should be somewhat shocking, or else what are we even doing here.

You talk about Anthropic giving the government 'enough rope' and getting 'owned', which seems like a tacit acknowledgement that the government does not give a shit about whatever the surface-level justification for this ban is. And you even explicitly acknowledge "the possiblility of insider plays by the current administration w/ OpenAI or SpaceX". What level of cynicism/tribalism are you on, that you don't see this as obviously the main story here?

nullbio 10 hours ago [-]
Can we stop pretending that Mythos is a good model yet?
sixothree 10 hours ago [-]
What was your particular experience with it?
nullbio 8 hours ago [-]
Hallucination city, doing whatever it feels like and far more than what I've bargained for, and performance on par with Opus 4.8 for coding in a large production codebase. I still have far more success with GPT 5.5, it actually follows my instructions and doesn't try to automate my entire job, which allows me to build skills and pipelines around the things I actually want automated.
solenoid0937 17 hours ago [-]
Amazon owns 5% of Anthropic. I doubt this is the outcome they wanted.

This is the government trying to swing its dick around and kill Anthropic because they wouldn't allow mass domestic surveillance with their models.

They're sending a message to the tech industry as well: "do as we say, or die."

This is the result of decades of Congress abdicating power to the executive.

PeterStuer 17 hours ago [-]
Amazon has up to 33 billion in Antrophic, but up to 50 billion in OpenAI. They need keep both of them in balance, to mitigate the threat of being disintermediated.
rocketpastsix 17 hours ago [-]
Amazon isn't just going to sit by while $33 billion is set on fire.
rdtsc 17 hours ago [-]
If burning $33B would make $66B somewhere else then I can see them doing it.
17 hours ago [-]
lavezzi 16 hours ago [-]
> This is the government trying to swing its dick around and kill Anthropic because they wouldn't allow mass domestic surveillance with their models.

Amodei has been calling for models to be regulated, so he got his wish.

stefan_ 17 hours ago [-]
It's one thing to have 5%, it's another for Jassys utter failure in Amazon AI efforts. They are nowhere, and the former isn't gonna save the latter job.
AtNightWeCode 17 hours ago [-]
WH is lying again of course. Has nothing to do with Amazon or security. Vengeance or trying to help SpaceX. Maybe WH did not like the bad stock price development after the IPO.
16 hours ago [-]
myko 7 hours ago [-]
What a clownshow, what a fucking circus
blitzar 17 hours ago [-]
> Researchers at Amazon had used a series of prompts to get Anthropic’s Fable 5 model to provide them with information that could be used to aid cyberattacks...

Are there going to be bans on things that could be used to aid in school shootings next?

16 hours ago [-]
newsclues 16 hours ago [-]
Canada had a school shooter that used ai tools and the public has not been informed of what happened in the chat
morkalork 15 hours ago [-]
It's OK tho, Sam personally apologized for that oopsie.
disillusioned 15 hours ago [-]
The specific breadth of that oopsie, to recall, was that multiple human reviewers recommended escalation to law enforcement, and were rebuffed. So the system _almost_ worked except for an unforced error and people died as a direct result. Oopsie, indeed.
deadbabe 16 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
disillusioned 15 hours ago [-]
Hard to put an economic damage value on the psychological scarring of everyone in the country sending their kid to school with this in the back of their minds, to say nothing of security theater put in place in an attempt to assuage those concerns. But, sure. Crowdstrike oopsie wiped out a lot more market cap, so I guess that's the priority.
15 hours ago [-]
logicchains 17 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
0xbadcafebee 16 hours ago [-]
> That's why school shootings pretty much never happened before the 1970s

School shootings didn't happen for multiple reasons that are not SSRIs:

  - Semi-automatic and automatic weapons weren't available to the public
  - There were no video games and few movies glorifying a lone gunman "getting revenge" on a society that spurned them (there movies about gangsters, or war movies)
  - There was no anti-American/facist "militia/tactical" cultural meme
  - There was not yet any widely known stories of suicide-by-cop and fame via mass-murder
  - The American cultural ethos had not yet turned cynical; once Vietnam and Nixon's betrayal happened, it was all downhill
  - We stopped locking up crazy people in insane asylums
  - Social isolation and urbanism increased population density and animosity
dabluecaboose 15 hours ago [-]
> - Semi-automatic and automatic weapons weren't available to the public

They were fully available to the public. Automatic weapons were tax-gated, but still were (and are!) available, after 1934. Semi-automatic weapons have been freely available to any citizen pretty much since they were invented (circa 1893).

m-hodges 17 hours ago [-]
> That's why school shootings pretty much never happened before the 1970s

This claim is gonna need a lot more evidence.

logicchains 17 hours ago [-]
Here's from Wikipedia all the mass shootings conducted by students prior to the 1970s. They're incredibly infrequent compared to the shootings of today,

March 26, 1893 – Plain Dealing, Louisiana (Plain Dealing High School): During an evening school dance, a fight broke out. Students fired shots, killing two immediately, fatally wounding two more, and injuring a professor (total: 4 killed, 1 wounded).

December 12, 1898 – Charleston, West Virginia: Young men (including students/former students in the context of a school exhibition) disrupted an event, leading to a brawl with gunfire. At least 6 killed (including students) and 4+ wounded in the chaos.

July 21, 1903 – Jackson, Kentucky (Cave Run School): Students James Barrett and Mack Howard dueled with pistols over a card game, killing each other; a 12-year-old bystander student was wounded (total: 2 killed, 1 wounded).

November 16, 1904 – Riverside, California (Indian School): A gunfight between pupils resulted in one student killed, another fatally wounded, and one wounded (total: 2 killed, 1 wounded).

October 8, 1950 – New Orleans, Louisiana (Booker T. Washington High School): Suspected gangsters (youths tied to students) fired on each other; 6 bystanders wounded.

May 5, 1956 – Seat Pleasant, Maryland (Maryland Park Junior High School): 15-year-old student Billy Ray Prevatte returned with a rifle after a reprimand and shot staff: 1 teacher killed, 2 injured (total: 3 victims).

October 17, 1961 – Denver, Colorado (Morey Junior High School): 14-year-old Tennyson Beard argued with a classmate, shot and wounded him, then fatally shot another student (total: 1 killed, 1–2 wounded).

October 5, 1966 – Grand Rapids, Minnesota (Grand Rapids High School): 15-year-old student David Black killed a school administrator and seriously wounded another student (total: 1 killed, 1 wounded).

m-hodges 17 hours ago [-]
I wasn’t asking for evidence of the number of mass shootings. I was asking for evidence of “that’s why”.
hn_throwaway_99 16 hours ago [-]
logicchains' "evidence" is one of the most ridiculous styles of argument I see more and more frequently in social media, so thank you for calling them out on it.

They made a very specific, unsupported claim, and then when you requested evidence of that, they responded with a completely unrelated set of information that in no way supported their original claim, as if a longer response someone makes their argument more credible.

I don't know if it's AI slop or human slop, but it's total slop regardless.

anigbrowl 16 hours ago [-]
One could just as easily blame the change on the availability of color TV, or cultural shifts that took place in the 1960s.
bflesch 16 hours ago [-]
Correlation != Causation

I invite you to scientifically work on this important topic. Catch up on previous work by others and then use a proper statistical methodology to do proper research and validate your hypothesis.

Other possible factors that could explain it apart from your theory on SSRIs: more exhaustive news reporting, less wealthy parents and thereby more kids brought up in poverty conditions, more parents with lead poisoning, more kids exposed to plastics, more weapons per household, more exposure to violence and/or mobbing, violence in video games, less third places that kids have for socializing, more social media, more mobbing at school, more unrealistic beauty standards and many others. Some of them might've been researched already and some might not.

Even though you're not trying to do a degree you can always do proper science and maybe also prove a novel explanation.

Topfi 17 hours ago [-]
SSRIs are a first line treatment across many EU countries too, yet we somehow manage.
vjvjvjvjghv 16 hours ago [-]
When I grew up in Germany, I had some pretty bad phases during my teens. I wonder if I had had easy access to guns together with lots of information and videos about shooters on the internet, maybe I would have thought about that too. I didn't have any of those so I sometimes thought about suicide but never about shooting others.

The US has a combination of SSRIs (maybe that's a factor, we don't know for sure), easy access to guns, gun culture, glorification of violence and vigilantism and over the last decades a lot of school shooters to imitate. Basically a ton of risk factors combined.

iririririr 17 hours ago [-]
man, to repeat this (obviously flawed) argument as your own... you are really down a very bad path of pernicious podcasts. reevaluate some values.
brisket_bronson 16 hours ago [-]
One: Correlation does not imply causation, two: SSRIs are available worldwide
mapontosevenths 17 hours ago [-]
Everything you said is here is wildly and completely inaccurate and seems to be based on fringe conspiracy theorist RFK Jr's thoroughly debunked lies.

The exact opposite is true. Countries with the highest SSRI use have the lowest mass shooting rates. The evidence doesn't lie. Politicians do.

https://www.factcheck.org/2025/10/rfk-jr-misleads-about-anti...

zephen 17 hours ago [-]
To be scrupulously fair, the SSRI thing was a conspiracy theory well before RFK Jr. came into the spotlight.
logicchains 17 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
m-hodges 16 hours ago [-]
The article you linked does not support the claim you made.

It argues that antidepressants may be associated with aggression or violent behavior in a small susceptible subset. That is very different from “SSRIs explain the rise of school shootings.”

The “most school shooters were on SSRIS” claim has been studied directly: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31513302/

Their conclusion: “most school shooters were not previously treated with psychotropic medications - and even when they were, no direct or causal association was found.”

dualvariable 17 hours ago [-]
> That's a stupid comparison because other countries have much less firearm ownership.

Okay, let's try being slightly less permissive in our firearm laws then, since you've just proven it works.

xnyan 16 hours ago [-]
> other countries have much less firearm ownership.

Interesting. Why do you think countries with lower firearm ownership rates have fewer shootings?

16 hours ago [-]
antinomicus 16 hours ago [-]
Lmao but the first part of your comment really shows the true reason other countries don’t have shootings…because they regulate guns….

So yea maybe some super rare cases of ssri aggression are real but by your own admission the solution to it is gun control.

vfclists 15 hours ago [-]
Why has HN become utterly useless as a place where meaningful discussions can be held?

A response concerning the model being prompted for information that could be used to aid cyberattaks ie - "Are there going to be bans on things that could be used to aid in school shootings next?" floats right to the top of the comment listings and the responses are quite irrelevant.

What is it with this place?

In the past I came to see what the comments about the articles were is hoping they would share more light on the topic. Right now they are totally meaningless.

dash2 17 hours ago [-]
I mean, for most of the world that is not the gotcha you think it is…
satvikpendem 17 hours ago [-]
It's not supposed to be a gotcha, it's supposed to be an example of the hypocrisy of the government.
mikey_p 16 hours ago [-]
Similar example Ohio legislature makes it illegal to drive with any THC of Cannabis products in the passenger compartment to crack down on people driving high, but there is nothing to prevent you driving with an open bottle of prescription opiates or benzos and popping those while you drive.
altairprime 16 hours ago [-]
Bad choice of example, then. Restricting things that are uniquely and critical to planning and executing school shootings is a highly desirable outcome for regulation, in the eyes of a society that desires its youth to grow up without constant threat of murder at their mandatory educational institutions. That desire is not particularly uniform in the U.S. right now, in contrast with much of the world. Choosing murder sprees as an example supports regulations that have societal safety benefits, which is the opposite of what was intended. Perhaps a different example might have the desired effect?
IshKebab 16 hours ago [-]
Most of the world didn't ban Fable.
graphime 17 hours ago [-]
> Are there going to be bans on things that could be used to aid in school shootings next?

No.

Because us Americans don’t care about school shootings.

I’d rather the government invest in S&P500 going higher.

You overestimate how many people actually care about mass shootings in America.

blitzar 17 hours ago [-]
Maybe we can incorporate the children one by one in delaware and then people will care.

On the plus side they will also then qualify for billions in government subsidies.

nish__ 16 hours ago [-]
Won't matter if they're not publicly traded.
icandoit 15 hours ago [-]
We could sell options on their future incomes, or taxes. An idea worth exploring. How can we encourage investment in future generations?
ElFitz 15 hours ago [-]
Isn't that what we call public debt?
rocketpastsix 17 hours ago [-]
I think you underestimate how many people actually care about mass shootings.
tokioyoyo 17 hours ago [-]
Caring with no significant action in prevention doesn’t really signal caring. Sure, it sucks, headlines get printed for a couple of months, then people forget and move on.

To put it in the most disrespectful and sad way, it looks like more people have been on the streets for Knicks games than most (any?) school shootings of the past decades.

dylan604 15 hours ago [-]
I think your assumption of lack of caring is misplaced. The citizens clearly care, but have no power to do anything about it. Those in power are the ones that do not care or are paid not to care.
SecretDreams 17 hours ago [-]
It's just harder to get the average joe charged up to fight a battle with anything meaningful on the line. Americans are used to living relatively cushy lives where they don't sacrifice their QOL to make the lives of their countrymen better. The closest thing to that are people in the military, and it's probably been a while since the US military is improving QOL, on average.

People will continue to be complacent on multiple fronts until it absolutely comes to a violent boil. I don't really see half measures or peaceful protests changing anything. And maybe I'm pessimistic, but I think the upcoming elections will either not change enough or be strongly manipulated to maintain the status quo.

tokioyoyo 16 hours ago [-]
>harder to get the average joe charged up to fight a battle with anything meaningful on the line

Doesn't this imply that on average people just don't care? So, school shooting preventions are just way down in the list of "things I care about", when you have "cushy lives where nobody wants to sacrifice their QOL".

SecretDreams 16 hours ago [-]
It means they don't care enough to meaningfully make sacrifices for change. To deal with school shootings is to change the constitution. The American constitution is basically wired for school shootings. To change the constitution is basically a civil war.

Things aren't binary. Many people care deeply about school shootings. But they don't have the means or power to organize to stop them and, individually, they are powerless.

tokioyoyo 16 hours ago [-]
They’re not binary, but when an issue persists for decades, over the course of multiple administrations, and political landscape… it shows either the country is incompetent in terms of solving an issue, or the issue is not a priority.

I wholeheartedly believe US can solve issues when it’s an important one. And thus, I think, for an average American it’s not an issue.

Decades is a very long timeframe. Countries have achieved more in shorter periods.

SecretDreams 14 hours ago [-]
> I wholeheartedly believe US can solve issues when it’s an important one.

What's the last important issue in the US that was democratically resolved?

nish__ 16 hours ago [-]
Enforcing the global use of the petro dollar is what keeps Americans living cushy lives so be careful disrespecting the military personel.
SecretDreams 14 hours ago [-]
My post was not disrespectful. It was matter of fact. And if the Petro Dollar only persists by use of force or perceived force, it's probably not a sustainable system for humanity. So hopefully we can go back to a soft power maintained Petro Dollar?
graphime 17 hours ago [-]
> I think you underestimate how many people actually care about mass shootings.

Less than 1% of the population, that’s for sure.

You remember the last protest about school shootings? Neither do I.

codingdave 13 hours ago [-]
Because it has moved way beyond protests. Everyone agrees that school shootings are bad. Legislation has been passed. Policies have changed. Schools have changed their security tactics. There have been years and years of meetings across the country with school administrators and boards talking about how to improve safety and navigate these issues, and then the schools themselves implementing new practices.

If you are looking around and saying that because people aren't waving sign on street corners, then nobody cares, then you have utterly missed a couple decades of dedicated efforts by many people working around these issues.

The fact that shootings still happen is tragic. But it is not because people are just shrugging and saying they don't care.

throw__away7391 16 hours ago [-]
Well they happen in schools and children don’t vote. If this had been a wave of senior center shootings, something would have been done a long, long time ago.
olyjohn 14 hours ago [-]
This is not a good argument. Children tend to have parents who can vote.
throw__away7391 15 minutes ago [-]
I see what you're saying, but I don't agree that it works this way. Parents' concerns for their children are far more self-serving than most parents claim. Consider that every "for the children" political agenda ever has nakedly ulterior motives--name one truly pro-child policy where children are directly prioritized at the expense of their parents? Consider the way that school schedules are oriented around their parents' convenience in spite of decades of studies showing the harmful health effects they have. During COVID we saw dramatic efforts to protect the elderly coupled with a push to reopen schools by parents tired of having to take care of them all day. Whatever you think of the restrictions one way or another, the prioritization of elderly was apparent throughout. These are the same parents who have repeated voted benefits for themselves at the direct expense of their children, saddling them with trillions of dollars of debt to support their own present consumption. I promise you, if seniors were regularly being gunned down like this they would have found a solution already.
throwaway-11-1 17 hours ago [-]
I get what you’re saying but in the last 20 years can you think of any mass protest that accomplished anything substantial? I don’t really blame people for giving up on it as a tool for change. TBH only truly effective one I can think of would be Jan 6
Topfi 16 hours ago [-]
I can, just not in the US [0]. I always presumed this is linked to the health care being provided by employers rather than having a more robust safety net that allows for civil disobedience without having to fear existential risks. However, I also can’t forget that the French have their safety net not as a God given right, but because they fought for it via (often not just civil) protest. Reference also the statements MLK JR made concerning the willingness of white moderates to engage in actually effective disobedience, even when their financial situation allows for such.

[0] https://thenonviolenceproject.wisc.edu/2023/06/02/recent-pro...

peyton 16 hours ago [-]
There are more people not on employer-provided health insurance in the US than exist in France. How does your presumption work given that fact?
Topfi 15 hours ago [-]
I just checked and it's 54% in the US [0] vs 0% in France (cause basic public healthcare isn't tied to employment). So, unless you are referring to absolute numbers (not very helpful when comparing countries of different sizes), I'm not sure what you are referring to.

I will admit that my purely personal thesis on this front goes a bit beyond healthcare. I feel that a robust safety net, iron clad right to protest and a large, at least reasonably financially stable (meaning no existential financial fears for at least the majority of citizenry, i.e. above roughly 60% middle class for a given economy) are needed to allow for protests in such a manner that the citizenry are both capable, willing and informed sufficiently to protect their own interests and democracy as a whole. Having the right and ability to protests is needed, just as much as being comfortable enough to have the time to actually stay politically engaged (consistent financial strain being a reasonable cause for why one doesn't stay informed in my book). France or my home country of Austria (imperfect countries like any other, I will (un)happily admit) on that front are in the 65%-75% range, whereas the US appears to barely get above 50% purely by income along with higher health care costs in general and employer linked plans for as stated above the majority, so these are somewhat interlinked in my view.

Same reason, albeit less extreme, why in war-torn countries, long standing brutal dictatorships and the like, the citizenry rarely is able to create any proper action agains their oppressors, not because they are accepting of the status quo, weak, or anything of the sort, but because when one is starving and trying to help their family unit survive, even beyond the risk that action can pose, their often isn't any time to actually consider it. "A republic, if you can keep it", in my opinion is a high demand from the public. They need to have the tools, rights and resources to actively defend it. Not saying France is perfect here, but I will say that it is easy to just raise our finger at the US populous without considering the whole picture.

[0] https://www.reuters.com/world/us/portion-insured-americans-w...

graphime 16 hours ago [-]
> I get what you’re saying but in the last 20 years can you think of any mass protest that accomplished anything substantial?

Nope.

Even the Jan 6 one didn’t really change our quality of life. And damn, that was a protest, by American standards.

vrganj 16 hours ago [-]
It was a protest as much as the Beer Hall Putsch was.
boston_clone 16 hours ago [-]
January Sixth was not a protest, it was an attempt to interfere with government processes to prevent Biden from being elected - so a really shitty attempt at a coup.
Jcowell 17 hours ago [-]
The author said nothing of the people but of the government itself. 12 years ago, elementary school children were slaughtered and even that wasn’t enough to ban guns.
andrew_lettuce 16 hours ago [-]
Thoughts and prayers doesn't count as truly caring
terabytest 15 hours ago [-]
I recommend revisiting this comment when you have a son or daughter.
satvikpendem 17 hours ago [-]
Hate to say it but you're right. If people cared, they'd actually do something about it.
shimman 17 hours ago [-]
People are doing something, the issue with you two's extremely poor thinking is that lack of inaction means no one cares. What it actually represents is the massive growing disparity between the political class and average Americans.

There is >70% public support universal background checks for all firearm transactions, safe storage laws, and crisis intervention. Just the same that there is also large public support for things like public jobs programs, medicare for all, universal childcare, or free university; there is a very real obstacle that the political class in this country are adamant about stopping all progress towards better lives and not strictly caring that the elites extract more wealth or corporations get more welfare.

tokioyoyo 16 hours ago [-]
I'm very sorry, but I've heard that "there's large public support for X, Y, Z" for decades. If there's no real action in achieving such things, my assumption is people don't actually care about it.

Personally, when I "care about something", I try to act on it. My list is not long, and I'm very grateful that I don't have to spend a single minute of my life to think about school shootings.

Avicebron 16 hours ago [-]
You clearly missed the part about the divide between the political class and everyone else.

Most people in the US are just trying to pay rent and maybe one day save up for a house by the time they are 40-50.

If you don't see this you are either 1) making enough money you are part of the problem 2) don't actually live in the US so have a completely unmoored understanding of reality on the ground here

tokioyoyo 16 hours ago [-]
I obviously don’t live in the US. My entire point was that people say that care about school shootings and etc., but unless they do anything about it, those are just words.

Given the voting record of the majority of the population, I tend to believe that an average American cares more about SPX. Which, honestly, is fine by me. Every nation and culture is different, freedom and etc. etc.. But it would be hard to convince me that an average citizen cares about it, because, once again, nothing has changed in decades.

For the record, I have nothing against Americans, you guys are a lovely bunch. But it is what it is.

shimman 8 hours ago [-]
We literally can't do anything dude, what are you advocating for? That we have an armed rebellion to legislate the people's laws under a workers tribunal?

I'm really curious what country you live in because it's one that's clearly not a democracy. Not saying it as an insult either, but surely even in countries run by authoritarians there is an understanding that leadership is sometimes completely divorced from the people?

I also personally have a hard time blaming voters for anything, in America we have two corporate powers that have been neglecting the material needs of workers for nearly 40 years now; when you have two corporate parties power tends to be unstable for any meaningful legislation which tends to only benefit the elites + corporations whereas workers require constant legislation to help them and guide the country to benefit them.

When you see very little material outcomes you will vote for more extreme candidates. I honestly believe this is the real lesson how fascism can flourish, and I think this is something that can easily be predicted with extreme accuracy too. You look at the Weimar Republic, it was one of the most advanced and democratic governments on Earth; yet it failed to stop the threat of Nazis, mostly due to the ineptitude of politicians that also rejected the material needs of a nation.

I know this is a huge tangent but I think it's useful to write, because I'm really curios on your upbringing. I'd think understanding power, corruption, and out of touch governments to be universal human experiences but maybe not. D:

solenoid0937 15 hours ago [-]
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vntok 16 hours ago [-]
Indeed, the more accurate way to say it is that people in the US don't care enough about mass school shootings to do something about it besides thought and prayers.
ndiddy 14 hours ago [-]
If you're not American, one thing that you have to keep in mind whenever you hear "there's large public support in the US for [insert vaguely left-wing thing here] but nothing gets done about it" is that the US's system of government is really only vaguely a democracy. It gives a disproportionate amount of power to conservative rural voters at the expense of everybody else.

This is exemplified in the Senate, which is the least representative legislative body of any democracy I am aware of. Each state gets 2 votes regardless of population, so Wyoming (population ~550,000) is given the same amount of votes as California (population ~39,000,000). Any remotely controversial piece of legislation needs to pass the Senate with a 60% majority. This means that 21 Republican states making up ~20% of the population can block any bill they don't want to pass. Senators are also elected for 6 year terms, which limits how accountable they are to their constituents.

If a bill gets past the Senate, it makes its way to the president, who has veto power over all legislation. The president is elected by electors selected by the states rather than individual voters, and the number of electors is not fairly apportioned either. For example, there are ~728,000 people per elector in California, but ~196,000 people per elector in Wyoming.

In effect, this means that public opinion has essentially no impact on the legislation the US government passes. A 2014 Princeton study ( https://archive.org/details/gilens_and_page_2014_-testing_th... ) found that "When the preferences of economic elites and the stands of organized interest groups are controlled for, the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy."

If you're interested in why the system was designed this way, I highly recommend the book "The Framers' Coup" by Michael Klarman.

throwawaytea 17 hours ago [-]
One infringes on a specific constitutional right.

Also, this country would get even more dangerous without good citizens owning guns.

IMO it's like herd immunity. Not everyone has guns. But the criminals don't know who does and who doesn't, so in a way they treat all homes as potentially being armed.

Our criminals are already pretty care free, I can't imagine how much worse it would be if they KNEW no one was armed.

prmoustache 16 hours ago [-]
Doh, the ones who own the guns are the criminal. If not today, one day in the future.

Most women who own a firearm and get shot are shot with their own firearm.

Firearms in an household with kids need to be locked out for the safety of all, rendering them useless if someone in a family is in threat of being harmed. There is virtually zero situation where it would help the family. Trying to stop a robbery is the best way to get shot, armed or not. One is always better off letting the thieves go and get compensation from insurance. Weapons im your household only increase the chance of someone in the household killing their spouse/siblings/parents without increasing the safety against criminals outside.

Gun owners who pretend to arm themselves against crime are really converting themselves into potential criminals. One can be mentally ok at the date of purchase but nobody can be 100% sure their mental health will stay the same all their life and we can't expect them to surrender their firearms when needed. Thus it should be a crime in itself to purchase guns.

bloggie 15 hours ago [-]
I'm not American so maybe I'm missing something, but doesn't the Constitution apply to all citizens? Is it not then unconstitutional to prevent federal inmates from possessing firearms while incarcerated?
e44858 13 hours ago [-]
Not all citizens have the right to freedom: "except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted"

https://www.senate.gov/about/origins-foundations/senate-and-...

throwawaytea 15 hours ago [-]
Yes you lose many of your rights when in prison.
EmoteSupportBot 17 hours ago [-]
The brainwashing is truly staggering isn't it?
Cider9986 17 hours ago [-]
A waste of an aged account.
ajross 15 hours ago [-]
> One infringes on a specific constitutional right.

The ability to develop and use technological products is, y'know, kinda protected speech under the first amendment.

Congress shall make no law... unless you're talking about stuff we think is dangerous; in that case foreigners can't say it and you can't tell them.

mindslight 16 hours ago [-]
While there is some truth here, it's worth noting that firearms are far from a deterrent - these days, many criminals are often enraged by a victim having a gun and end up escalating further. Earlier this year there was a gang execution in Minneapolis that was prominent national news. The thugs were probably just going to kick the shit out of the victim, but when they discovered he merely had a gun, they took it from him and then held him down and shot him repeatedly in the back. Or there was another famous killing in Louisville about 6 years back. It started off as a simple night time home invasion but when one of the residents started to defend themselves by firing a warning shot, the perps responded by turning the home into a shooting gallery and ended up killing the other resident. So these days it's more of a toss up because we're not in the Wild West or even Paul Kersey's cities, but rather subject to highly organized crime that demands supplicating obedience and will readily retaliate against anyone who tries to defend themselves.
DivingForGold 16 hours ago [-]
If the homeowners had a shotgun it would have been over quickly. Shotguns don't miss.
unsnap_biceps 15 hours ago [-]
Bullshit. Shotguns are not designed to have a wide pattern close up. They're designed to have a wide pattern out at 40 yards or so.

Sawed off shotguns have a wider pattern closer, but it's wildly random and impossible to aim with any real effectiveness.

I have both. I shoot trap. My gun on my bedside is a p226 with a flashlight that has a strobe option.

15 hours ago [-]
mindslight 16 hours ago [-]
There were like seven assailants, and the shot actually did hit one of them in the leg. This is what caused the others to retaliate. I don't think a shotgun would have helped. Unfortunately the incident was not a game of DOOM.
throwaway85825 16 hours ago [-]
If anything that is an argument for extended magazines.
mindslight 16 hours ago [-]
At a certain point numbers just don't work out that way. Being woken up in the middle of the night and facing seven alert and well-prepared attackers? Good luck.

The real problem is the corrupt politically-motivated DA who declined to even charge most of the perps. Only one of them got any jail time. The others are still out on our streets. Individual action can help mitigate, but it can't make up for the trend of politicians accepting and normalizing violent crime.

hurtigioll 15 hours ago [-]
full auto, defensive grenades
mindslight 15 hours ago [-]
Plasma rifle might be able to pull it off.
olyjohn 14 hours ago [-]
Clearly every household needs a BFG9000.
throwawaytea 15 hours ago [-]
The warning shot was the main mistake. It goes against all training. Only shoot to kill.
mindslight 15 hours ago [-]
Accounts differ. It's hard to tell if it was really a warning shot or if that's merely what the resident said after the fact to avoid being prosecuted for having defended themselves.
antinomicus 17 hours ago [-]
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throwaway85825 16 hours ago [-]
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veni0 11 hours ago [-]
lol, what's jokes.
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serguzest 15 hours ago [-]
I don’t buy any of this. They released something extremely resource-hungry, slow, and token-intensive. In layman’s terms, it feels more like overclocking than a real improvement over Opus.

I suspect it was not sustainable to run it for millions of users without a huge price adjustment. So, before the IPO, they may have wanted to preview something “cool” and then stage some kind of legal force majeure.

Also, considering how corrupt the current U.S. government appears to be, it is not impossible that one of Trump’s sons has a partnership with Anthropic, or that some kind of backdoor deal is going on. In that case, this could have been done in cooperation with a corrupt government

sixothree 10 hours ago [-]
It is sad to think this administration would not do this if there wasn't a profit motive. I'm not convinced you identified it. But there is no way there was any sort of rigor applied to this.
whalesalad 11 hours ago [-]
This is such an insidey job corrupt Trump admin situation.

As an Anthropic partner and a massive web infra provider themselves, the reasonable move here would have been to go directly to Anthropic to report this jailbreak. The same way any other sort of software security vulnerability is reported and dealt with. "Hey buddy, uhh, we need to show you something" and they fix it, and you continue to work together and collaborate and get a fat check in the meantime.

MAGA is mad that Anthropic won't kiss the ring and they're either helping AMZN with this request because it is convenient for both of them.

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mrcwinn 17 hours ago [-]
If this is true, the Trump administration did the correct and responsible thing. All the immediate pouncing last night is a good reminder to wait a moment for the facts. I’m sure there’s more to learn even still.
jmclnx 18 hours ago [-]
I can't get to the article, but if the headline is right, this is interesting.

This tells me it looks like the start of AI funding drying up. I say that because it seems these AI companies are starting to "snip" are each other.

recroad 14 hours ago [-]
Snitches be bitches
PeterStuer 17 hours ago [-]
Waving goodby to my Prime. Long overdue tbh.
tdb7893 17 hours ago [-]
I haven't bothered to keep up with all the frontier drama, are the latest Anthropic models more dangerous or easier to get around safeguards than other models?
nijave 17 hours ago [-]
Anthropic released a new class of model called Mythos a tier above the last one, Opus. The Mythos model was designed for cyber security then they tried to undo that (my understanding) for Fable

So arguably "more dangerous" by design and potentially "more dangerous" because they're smarter although there's ongoing debate to "what degree"

adamtaylor_13 16 hours ago [-]
This smells like anti-competitive behavior, no? Amazon snitching to the government re: Anthropic doesn't seem particularly "open market" to me.
eranation 16 hours ago [-]
Amazon invests in Anthropic, and has partnership with them on AWS Bedrock.

https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-amazon-compute

SilverElfin 16 hours ago [-]
Amazon was the earliest large investor in Anthropic and has invested in them several times since then.
Lerc 18 hours ago [-]
One of the things that I have come to trust the least in journalism is any WSJ story that says "people familiar with the matter said"

Can anyone find another source for this?

hn_throwaway_99 17 hours ago [-]
Why? Are there specific examples of WSJ reporting using unnamed sources that turned out to be false/misleading that led you to this conclusion? Unnamed sources carry some risks, sure, but it's obvious that few people would be willing to put their named to leaked info like this.
Lerc 14 hours ago [-]
"In 2019, Altman was asked to resign from Y Combinator after partners alleged he had put personal projects, including OpenAI, ahead of his duties as president, said people familiar with the matter."

A statement declared to be false by the person who made the decision, in evident increasing frustration as the falsehood purpetuated.

hn_throwaway_99 12 hours ago [-]
I am familiar with that entire episode, and while I agree that quote gives the wrong impression, that definitely falls in the realm of gray area and it's not hard for me to see how "people family with the matter" truthfully reported what they knew: Namely, Altman was asked to choose his priorities - do one or the other, but not both. Again, I think reporting that as "asked to resign" gives an incorrect impression of what happened, but literally it's not that far off.
Lerc 11 hours ago [-]
They also did

>Investigators found ammunition engraved with expressions of transgender and antifascist ideology inside the rifle that authorities believe was used in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, according to an internal law enforcement bulletin and a person familiar with the investigation.

This case obviously drew more scrutiny and after much criticism was later changed to begin

>Editor's Note: An earlier version of this article detailed how an internal law enforcement bulletin said that ammunition recovered following the Charlie Kirk shooting was engraved with expressions of “transgender and anti-fascist ideology." Justice Department officials later urged caution about the bulletin by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, saying it may not accurately reflect the messages on the ammunition, and the article was updated Thursday to reflect that. This editor's note was appended on Friday, Sept. 12, after Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said the engravings included one that said “Hey fascist!” along with other messages and symbols. He gave no indication that the ammunition included any transgender references.

And even then the bulletin was not thought to be genuine (especially considering it wasn't true)

It took the NYT less an an hour to debunk. The Wrap reported

>The false report appears to have started with right-wing podcaster Steven Crowder, who posted a purported ATF memo with the claim.

fg137 17 hours ago [-]
You don't have to trust WSJ's reporting, but most people do, including fellow journalists. Their track record is also solid.

(Their opinion section is of course a different matter.)

jsnell 17 hours ago [-]
Is your objection specifically to the WSJ, or to the sources not being named in general?

If the former, yes, the are other outlets reporting this with independent sourcing (e.g. The Information).

Lerc 13 hours ago [-]
In general the absence of any clear statement of the source having an ability to know the information.

Specifically, yes The WSJ journal "sources familiar with" has been the end point of research into many claims that I have tried to find the origin of.

A lot of stories report that the WSJ has reported...

The combination of the paywall limiting casual readers to check the context of a reference and the perception that a widely reported claim is true needs a stronger foundation than 'A source familiar with said [something that is frequently an interpretation rather than a direct observation]

So yes, I'm definitely prepared to accept independent sourcing. Do you have a link?

jsnell 11 hours ago [-]
https://www.theinformation.com/articles/amazons-jassy-raised...

But the sourcing isn't any more detailed, just independent rather than just re-reporting the WSJ story.

tonfa 17 hours ago [-]
What's the issue with WSJ? "people familiar with the matter" is standard lingo, means the journalist and editors have vetted the sources (multiple).
nijave 17 hours ago [-]
& many times the sources don't want to reveal their identity or go on record. A sort of tradeoff--to get the info they have to protect the source

"You may not talk to the media" is pretty standard language in US employee contracts so obviously these people don't want to fireable offenses on the front page of the newspaper.

bartleeanderson 10 hours ago [-]
I saw several mentions of corruption. But who brought it to the administrations attention. Envy and corruption. Stifle competition, by greasing palms you are familiar with.
JumpCrisscross 17 hours ago [-]
When I speak to journalists, I am always on deep background. I’ll point them to people who can corroborate. But they’ll be off the record. Refusing anything but named sources in one’s information diet is fine, but most people I know who do this are remarkably inconsistent on the other axis, source quality, accepting names randos on Twitter as the word of god while rejecting respected journalism because Congressional staffers aren’t going to get themselves fired over a story.
Lerc 14 hours ago [-]
I don't mind anonymous sources provided there is a clear assertion by the journalist that the source witnessed or had direct evidence of the thing being disclosed. Anything that, should the information be wrong, reveals that either the journalist or the source was lying.

A source 'familiar with' does not reach that bar.

"A source who wishes to remain anonymous witnessed..." Is acceptable.

"Subject disclosed to an anonymous source...."

With the current source decaration they could make any claim they wanted in the story. They coud declare alien invasion and when called out say there was a person on Reddit familiar with the situation, they were wrong about everything and had no credibility, but they were familiar with the situation.

When the battle is to come up with the most significant claim the quickest, there needs to be stronger standards for the accuracy of the claim

JumpCrisscross 56 minutes ago [-]
Eh, this is a silly bar for evidence. I'm sure someone can find a way to functionally operate in the world at it. But most people can't, and certainly not anyone with any influence. There is value in hearing suppositions. Hypotheses. Even if they haven't yet been proved. In part because airing that laundry sometimes helps prove or disprove them.
bigcloud1299 7 hours ago [-]
I am a die hard fan of GPT and codex, I have been working on a very complex system, it was taking codex/gpt5.5 xhigh weeks to actually properly get it working, it kept making massive mistakes, it never followed the architecture and desing, it designed thin layers, inline LLM prompts even though our docs explicitly told it to externalize it, it hardcoded formulas in line in ts files instead of yaml files, did not wire various components, and so on.

i generally dont use claude due to very bad early on experience with it (it did the famous rm rf ). I gave Fable a try on isolated worktree, and in 4 days it completed work that i was assuming would take me until mid july with codex/gpt5.5 xhigh + fast.

I wish / and hope Fable comes back, i wish i had it for two more weeks. its just on another level

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