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OpenAI has begun a tightly controlled preview of GPT-5.6 Sol, a new flagship artificial intelligence model with stronger cybersecurity, coding and scientific capabilities, restricting access to vetted partners while it works with US authorities on safeguards for frontier systems. The rollout covers three models under the GPT-5.6 family: Sol, the most advanced tier; Terra, a lower-cost model designed for everyday work; and Luna, a faster and cheaper […]

Anthropic has restored limited access to Claude Mythos 5 for selected U. S. organisations involved in protecting critical infrastructure, easing a two-week suspension that had disrupted cybersecurity work across major companies and public-sector partners. The decision allows more than 100 vetted organisations to resume use of the company’s most advanced cyber-focused artificial intelligence model. The approved users are understood to include major enterprises, government-linked agencies and institutions […]

Brussels has moved to assess the fallout from Washington’s order cutting foreign users off from Anthropic’s most powerful artificial intelligence models, turning a corporate shutdown into a test of allied trust in critical digital infrastructure. The European Commission is examining the practical consequences for users across the bloc after Anthropic disabled Fable 5 and Mythos 5, saying it had received a US export-control directive barring access by […]

Anthropic has released Claude Fable 5, its most powerful AI model made broadly available, opening public access to a safeguarded version of the company’s Mythos-class technology after months of controlled testing among selected partners. The launch marks a significant shift for the San Francisco-based AI company, which had previously limited Mythos-class capabilities because of concerns over advanced cybersecurity and biological-risk use cases. Claude Fable 5 is being […]

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Collaboration will support efforts to identify and remediate software vulnerabilities using advanced AI capabilities

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 4 June 2026 – TrendAI™, the enterprise AI security leader from Trend Micro Incorporated (TYO: 4704; TSE: 4704), today announced its participation in Project Glasswing, an initiative focused on helping organizations identify and address vulnerabilities in critical software systems.

As part of the program, TrendAI™ will use Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview to support the review and analysis of software code, helping threat intelligence researchers turn accelerated vulnerability discovery into coordinated disclosure, prioritized remediation, and measurable risk reduction through vulnerability shielding and virtual patching.

AI is dramatically accelerating vulnerability discovery. TrendAI™ views this as a positive signal for the industry – it is part of the broader, collaborative ecosystem TrendAI™ has been actively contributing to for decades alongside organizations like Anthropic.

Rachel Jin, Chief Platform and Business Officer, Head of TrendAI™: “We’re aligned with Anthropic’s goals of using AI to make all software more secure. Organizations increasingly depend on software that operates at tremendous scale and supports critical business functions. Project Glasswing represents an important opportunity to explore how advanced AI can help software providers identify vulnerabilities earlier and improve the security and resilience of the systems customers depend on every day.”

TrendAI™ joins a growing community of organizations participating in Project Glasswing to better understand how frontier and advanced AI models can support defensive security efforts and improve the security of critical software infrastructure.

Insights gained through the program will contribute to informing the broader industry efforts to strengthen the security of the digital ecosystem.

Hashtag: #trendai #trendmicro #trendvisionone #visionone #trendaivisionone




The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

About Anthropic

Anthropic is an AI safety and research company dedicated to building reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems. Its Claude family of models enables advanced capabilities across a wide range of applications, including code understanding and security analysis.

About TrendAI™

TrendAI™, the global AI security leader and enterprise business unit of Trend Micro, empowers organizations with full AI visibility and consolidated security that inspires confidence, drives innovation, and eliminates risk. Trusted by the largest enterprises and governments across 185 countries, TrendAI™ secures the entire organization, from identities to infrastructure to data. Global Fortune 500 companies rely on TrendAI™ to cut risk and stop threats up to three months earlier, powered by world-leading threat and attack intelligence. Through deep ecosystem partnerships with market leaders like NVIDIA, Anthropic, AWS, Google, and Microsoft, TrendAI™ empowers your organization to securely drive forward at the speed of AI. AI Fearlessly. Learn more at trendaisecurity.com.

Anthropic has expanded access to Claude Mythos Preview to about 200 organisations, widening a controlled cybersecurity programme designed to help governments, companies and critical software maintainers find severe vulnerabilities before attackers can exploit them. The San Francisco-based artificial intelligence company is adding around 150 organisations to Project Glasswing, its gated initiative for defensive use of a frontier model that has drawn intense attention from technology companies, banks, […]

Anthropic is expanding access to Claude Mythos Preview through Project Glasswing, widening a controlled cybersecurity programme at a time when North Korean-linked hackers are sharpening attacks against macOS users in the financial, venture capital, Web3 and cryptocurrency sectors. The San Francisco-based AI company plans to increase the number of Project Glasswing partners from about 50 to roughly 200 organisations across more than 15 countries, broadening access to […]

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Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview has identified more than 10,000 high- or critical-severity software vulnerabilities through Project Glasswing, intensifying debate over whether frontier AI is becoming a defensive breakthrough or a new accelerant for cyber risk. The findings, disclosed after the initiative’s first month of operation, mark a sharp escalation in AI-assisted vulnerability discovery across software used in operating systems, browsers, cloud platforms, open-source projects and financial infrastructure. […]

OpenAI has launched Daybreak, a cybersecurity initiative designed to use frontier AI models and Codex Security to find software flaws, generate fixes and verify remediation before attackers can exploit weaknesses in code. Daybreak marks a sharper push by the ChatGPT maker into defensive cybersecurity, where AI systems are being positioned not merely as coding assistants but as tools for secure-by-design software development. The service is built around […]

  Cybercriminals have used artificial intelligence to identify and weaponise a previously unknown software flaw, marking a significant escalation in the use of AI for offensive cyber operations. The attempted campaign targeted a widely used open-source, web-based system administration tool and centred on a zero-day vulnerability that could bypass two-factor authentication when valid user credentials were already available. The operation was disrupted before it could be used […]

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Japan has set up a financial-sector task force to assess risks from advanced artificial intelligence systems capable of discovering software flaws at a speed that could outpace existing cyber defences, deepening official concern over the resilience of banks, exchanges and payment infrastructure.

The move follows high-level talks involving the Financial Services Agency, the Bank of Japan, national cyber security officials, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Mizuho Financial Group and Japan Exchange Group. The focus is Anthropic’s Mythos, a powerful AI model developed for defensive cyber security work but now regarded by regulators as a potential systemic risk if similar capabilities reach hostile actors.

Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama has framed the issue as an urgent challenge for core financial institutions, warning that Japan’s highly connected financial system could face cascading disruption if attackers used AI to identify and exploit weaknesses before institutions could repair them. No breach linked to Mythos has been reported, but officials are pressing banks to examine incident response plans, software exposure, vendor dependencies and market-continuity arrangements.

Japan tightens bank defences over Mythos as regulators confront a new cyber security problem: an AI tool built to strengthen software security may also demonstrate how fast the balance between defenders and attackers is shifting. Anthropic has said its Mythos Preview found thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities, including flaws affecting every major operating system and web browser. The company has placed the model under restricted access through Project Glasswing, an effort to use frontier AI for defensive discovery before equivalent capabilities spread more widely.

Security specialists see the financial sector as particularly exposed because banks rely on layered infrastructure that includes legacy systems, cloud services, trading platforms, third-party vendors and customer-facing applications. A vulnerability in one component may not remain isolated. Settlement systems, payment networks and securities markets depend on trust, synchronised data and rapid processing, leaving little tolerance for prolonged outages or uncertainty.

Japan’s top lenders have spent heavily on cyber resilience after a series of global incidents involving ransomware, software supply-chain attacks and attacks on critical infrastructure. Yet regulators remain concerned that AI-enabled vulnerability discovery could compress the time between flaw identification and exploitation. Traditional patch cycles often take days or weeks, while advanced models may help attackers generate working exploit paths far faster.

The task force is expected to coordinate technical assessments, information sharing and emergency procedures across the financial sector. Officials are also likely to examine how institutions verify third-party software, monitor anomalous activity and isolate critical operations during a cyber event. For exchanges and clearing systems, the priority will be maintaining orderly trading and settlement even if parts of the technology stack come under pressure.

The concern extends beyond Japan. Regulators in Asia, Europe and the United States have been urging banks to review their cyber controls as AI systems become more capable of code analysis, vulnerability chaining and automated exploitation. The issue has moved from a narrow technology debate into the domain of financial stability, because a successful attack on a major bank or exchange could quickly affect liquidity, confidence and cross-border transactions.

Anthropic has presented Mythos as a controlled defensive tool rather than a public product. The company says the model is intended to help responsible institutions find and fix vulnerabilities before they are misused. That defence has not removed policy concerns. The same capability that enables security teams to uncover hidden bugs can also lower the barrier for sophisticated offensive activity if access controls fail or comparable models emerge elsewhere.

Japan’s response reflects a broader shift in cyber regulation. Authorities are moving away from treating cyber security as a compliance checklist and towards stress-testing how institutions would cope with fast-moving, AI-assisted threats. Banks may face pressure to shorten patching timelines, improve software inventories and strengthen board-level oversight of technology risk.

For Japan, the issue also intersects with its ambition to modernise finance while promoting digital innovation. The country is expanding fintech services, digital payments and AI adoption across corporate operations, but regulators are signalling that innovation must be matched by stronger safeguards. Financial institutions are being asked to prepare for a threat environment in which attackers may use tools that can scan, reason and adapt at machine speed.

The immediate test for the task force will be whether it can turn concern into operational readiness. That means clear reporting channels, shared technical indicators, realistic crisis drills and faster coordination between banks, regulators, exchanges and cyber agencies. Japan’s financial authorities are seeking to prevent an AI-driven security breakthrough from becoming a market-disrupting event.

Mozilla has released Firefox 150 with a broad security update that fixes 41 vulnerabilities, including multiple high-impact flaws tied to memory handling, browser components and privilege controls, prompting renewed calls for users and enterprise administrators to move quickly on patching. Mozilla’s advisory for the release was published on April 21, 2026, and classed the overall impact as high. The most serious issues include CVE-2026-6746, a use-after-free flaw […]

  Unauthorized access to Anthropic’s tightly restricted Claude Mythos Preview has sharpened concerns over how even limited-release cybersecurity AI can slip beyond its intended perimeter, raising fresh questions about vendor oversight, access governance and the pace at which powerful offensive-capable tools are entering real-world environments. Anthropic announced Mythos on 7 April as part of a controlled programme for defensive cybersecurity use, and the company is now investigating […]

Anthropic’s Claude Opus has been thrust into a fresh security debate after researcher Mohan Pedhapati said he used the model to help build a working V8 exploit chain that achieved code execution against an outdated Chromium build bundled with Discord. Pedhapati, CTO of Hacktron and known online as s1r1us, said the exercise ran over about a week, consumed 2.3 billion tokens, cost $2,283 in API fees and […]

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Commercial artificial intelligence models are advancing quickly in vulnerability research and exploit development, sharpening concern across the cybersecurity industry that tools built for productivity and defence could also lower the barrier for offensive misuse. A study by Forescout’s Vedere Labs found that commercial systems now outperform open-source and underground alternatives in identifying software flaws, while more than half of the models tested were able to generate exploits […]

Anthropic has rolled out Claude Opus 4.7, an upgraded version of its top broadly available artificial intelligence model, pitching it as a stronger tool for advanced software engineering just days after keeping its more powerful Mythos Preview behind tight access controls because of cyber-risk concerns. The move gives developers a more capable coding model while signalling that Anthropic is trying to balance commercial momentum with a more […]

OpenAI has launched GPT-5.4-Cyber, a new version of its frontier model tailored for defensive cybersecurity work, moving quickly to answer growing concern that ever more capable AI systems could help both defenders and attackers in a widening digital arms race. The release came a week after Anthropic disclosed Claude Mythos Preview under its tightly controlled Project Glasswing programme, setting up a new contest over who can best […]

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Anthropic has launched Project Glasswing, a controlled cybersecurity programme that gives a select group of large technology, finance and security organisations access to its unreleased Claude Mythos Preview model to identify and help fix serious software vulnerabilities in widely used systems. The company says the model has already uncovered thousands of significant flaws across operating systems, browsers and other foundational software, but has stopped short of making […]

Anthropic’s accidental exposure of internal material about an unreleased AI system dubbed Claude Mythos has jolted investors, sending cybersecurity shares sharply lower and adding to pressure across risk assets, while reviving a deeper debate over whether frontier AI is moving faster than the safeguards meant to contain it. The leaked material, first reported by Fortune on March 26 and 27, described Mythos as Anthropic’s most powerful model […]

Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin, remains one of the most intriguing figures in modern finance. In his latest book, *The Mysterious Mr. Nakamoto*, author Benjamin Wallace embarks on a fifteen-year quest to uncover the identity behind this digital currency pioneer.

Nakamoto introduced Bitcoin in 2008 through a white paper detailing a peer-to-peer electronic cash system. This innovation laid the foundation for a decentralized financial network, free from traditional banking intermediaries. Despite Bitcoin’s global impact, Nakamoto vanished in 2011, leaving behind a fortune in unspent bitcoins and an enduring mystery surrounding his identity.

Wallace’s investigation delves into the cypherpunk movement of the 1990s, a collective advocating for privacy-enhancing technologies and cryptographic solutions. This community’s ideals significantly influenced Bitcoin’s development, aiming to create a currency independent of governmental control. Through meticulous research, Wallace examines potential candidates who could be Nakamoto, analyzing their backgrounds, writing styles, and contributions to cryptography.

One prominent figure explored is Hal Finney, a renowned cryptographer and the first person, aside from Nakamoto, to run the Bitcoin software. Finney’s involvement in early Bitcoin development and his correspondence with Nakamoto position him as a plausible candidate. However, Finney consistently denied being Nakamoto until his death in 2014.

Another individual scrutinized is Nick Szabo, a computer scientist known for his concept of “Bit Gold,” a precursor to Bitcoin. Linguistic analyses have highlighted similarities between Szabo’s writings and Nakamoto’s white paper, yet Szabo has repeatedly refuted claims of being Bitcoin’s creator.

The book also addresses the controversial claims of Australian computer scientist Craig Wright, who has publicly asserted that he is Satoshi Nakamoto. Despite presenting purported evidence, Wright’s claims have been met with skepticism, and he has not provided cryptographic proof accepted by the broader community.

Wallace’s narrative not only investigates these individuals but also reflects on the broader implications of Nakamoto’s anonymity. Bitcoin’s decentralized nature is intrinsically linked to the absence of a central authority, embodied by its creator’s pseudonymity. This deliberate concealment has fueled speculation and intrigue, contributing to Bitcoin’s mythos and cultural significance.

The author employs forensic techniques, including textual analysis and code examination, to trace Nakamoto’s digital footprints. Despite these efforts, the true identity remains elusive, underscoring the challenges inherent in unmasking a figure who meticulously crafted his anonymity.

Wallace’s exploration extends beyond the search for Nakamoto, offering insights into the evolution of digital currencies and their impact on global finance. The book contextualizes Bitcoin’s rise within economic events such as the 2008 financial crisis, highlighting the demand for alternative financial systems.

SmythOS, a new business software suite, is revolutionizing how companies integrate their operations across diverse global environments. The innovative platform promises to harmonize various business functions, transcending barriers of distance, language, and cultural differences. SmythOS integrates enterprise resource planning (ERP), customer relationship management (CRM), and project management into a single, cohesive system. The platform’s adaptive algorithms facilitate seamless communication and data sharing among international teams. This comprehensive […]

Via Nicholas Eberstadt of CommentaryMagazine.com, On the morning of November 9, 2016, America’s elite—its talking and deciding classes—woke up to a country they did not know. To most privileged and well-educated Americans, especially those living in its bicoastal bastions, the election of Donald Trump had been a thing almost impossible even to imagine. What sort of country would go and elect someone like Trump as president? Certainly not […]

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