Skip to content
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner

Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

  • Attack/News Feeds
  • Gov Alerts/ISAC Feeds
  • Vulnerability Alerts
  • Privacy/Governance Feeds
  • Fraud Feeds
  • iOS App
  • Android App
  • Home
  • Attack Feeds
  • Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month  – CyberScoop
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month  - CyberScoop

Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month  – CyberScoop

Posted on May 26, 2026 By Greg Otto No Comments on Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month  – CyberScoop
Attack Feeds

Anthropic said its month-old Project Glasswing initiative has uncovered more than 10,000 high- or critical-severity software vulnerabilities across systemically important code, a finding the company says has shifted the central problem in cybersecurity from discovering flaws to verifying and patching them.

The findings, drawn from partner reports and independent evaluations, mark one of the first large-scale accountings of what a frontier AI model can do when pointed at widely used code, and of the bottlenecks that emerge once it does.

Several partners reported that their rates of bug discovery had increased more than tenfold. Cloudflare identified 2,000 bugs across its critical-path systems, including 400 rated high or critical, with a false-positive rate the company said it considered better than that of human testers. At one unnamed partner bank, the model was credited with helping detect and prevent a fraudulent $1.5 million wire transfer initiated after a customer’s email account was compromised and followed up with spoofed phone calls.

External evaluations cited in the update tracked with the results Anthropic released. The United Kingdom’s AI Security Institute found that Mythos Preview was the first model to solve both of its cyber ranges — simulations of multistep cyberattacks — from end to end. Mozilla said it found and fixed 271 vulnerabilities in Firefox 150 while testing the model, more than 10 times the number found in Firefox 148 using an earlier Anthropic model. AI-powered security platform XBOW called the model a significant step up over existing systems on its web exploit benchmark.

Anthropic also used Mythos to scan more than 1,000 open-source projects. The model has flagged 23,019 potential vulnerabilities, 6,202 of them estimated as high or critical. Of 1,752 high- or critical-rated findings reviewed by six independent security research firms or by Anthropic itself, over 90% were confirmed as valid, and over 62% were confirmed to be high or critical.

The company did note that while it’s good at finding vulnerabilities, there is still a gap in having people fix every issue. 

“The bottleneck in fixing bugs like these is the human capacity to triage, report, and design and deploy patches for them,” the report states. 

Open-source maintainers have also been contending with a wave of low-quality, AI-generated bug reports, and Anthropic said it tries to reproduce and assess each issue before reporting it. At maintainers’ request, it has sometimes disclosed bugs without further vetting, reporting 1,129 such cases, of which the model estimated 175 to be high or critical.

Anthropic said it has not released Mythos-class models publicly because no company, including itself, has developed safeguards to prevent serious misuse. In the interim, it has released Claude Security in public beta for enterprise customers, which it said has been used to patch more than 2,100 vulnerabilities in three weeks using the publicly available Claude Opus 4.7, and has begun a Cyber Verification Program for security professionals.

The company said it plans to expand Project Glasswing with additional partners, including U.S. and allied governments, before any broader release of the underlying model.

“Glasswing helps the most systemically important cyber defenders gain an asymmetric advantage. However, there is an urgent need for as many organizations as possible to shore up their cyber defenses,” the report states. “We hope that our generally available models, and the new tools, resources, and research we’re providing to accompany them, will support those organizations to improve their cybersecurity posture.”

The post Anthropic: Mythos finds more than 10,000 software flaws in first month appeared first on CyberScoop.

  –

Read More  – CyberScoop 

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Chinese Threat Actors Ditch Static Phishing Pages for Live Credential Interception –

You may also like

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Ivanti’s EPMM is under active attack, thanks to two critical zero-days  - CyberScoop
Attack Feeds
Ivanti’s EPMM is under active attack, thanks to two critical zero-days  – CyberScoop
February 3, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | ⚡ Weekly Recap: Proxy Botnet, Office Zero-Day, MongoDB Ransoms, AI Hijacks & New Threats  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
⚡ Weekly Recap: Proxy Botnet, Office Zero-Day, MongoDB Ransoms, AI Hijacks & New Threats  – The Hacker News
February 2, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Closing the Gap: The Regulatory and Structural Maturation of Digital Assets  - Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Attack Feeds
Closing the Gap: The Regulatory and Structural Maturation of Digital Assets  – Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
May 17, 2026
Attack Feeds
Smashing Security podcast #453: The Epstein Files didn’t hide this hacker very well  – GRAHAM CLULEY
February 4, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • Attack Feeds
  • Privacy/Governance Feed
  • Gov/ISAC Feeds
  • Alert Feeds
  • Privacy Policy
  • Wagner Cybersecurity

Copyright © 2026 AttackFeed by Joe Wagner.

Theme: Oceanly News Dark by ScriptsTown

We are using cookies for analytics purposes only.  We do not store, track or sell user information.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.