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Anthropic's Mythos: The AI Too Dangerous to Release

19 min · 28 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Anthropic's Mythos: The AI Too Dangerous to Release

Descripción

Anthropic just drew a line in the sand. Their latest frontier model MYTHOS is so capable at autonomously discovering and exploiting cybersecurity vulnerabilities that they’ve refused to release it to the public. Instead, it’s being quietly handed to a handful of giants like Microsoft and JP Morgan Chase and top government officials, including the Treasury Secretary and the Fed Chair have already been briefed. In this episode, James Falkoff joins Nilanjana Bhowmik to break down exactly what MYTHOS is, why it’s different from every AI model before it, and why the implications stretch far beyond cybersecurity. Inside the episode: * Why MYTHOS crossed the line that Opus 4.6 didn’t * Why MYTHOS can reverse-engineer closed-source code (including proprietary systems like Windows) to surface vulnerabilities no human ever caught * The shift from human-speed cyberattack to machine-speed and why defense must now match that pace * Why Anthropic chose to restrict access instead of releasing publicly * Why the government took the warning seriously and whether the market did too * The equity crisis hiding inside AI model access * What MYTHOS signals about where open-source models are heading * The growing concern: unequal access to powerful AI systems * Opus 4.7 and the “lazy model” debate * Compute scarcity as the hidden constraint shaping AI progress Watch Full Episode on YouTube About James Falkoff: James has over 16 years of experience investing in technology across public and private markets, including more than a decade in venture capital. He has led over 25 early-stage investments and is known for his thought leadership, strong exit track record, and hands-on work with portfolio companies to drive growth. Before joining Converge, he was a Principal at Longworth Venture Partners, where he partnered with Nilanjana Bhowmik to identify high-potential sectors and secure early access to top startups. His portfolio includes companies like Olapic (acquired by Monotype), RapidMiner (Altair), JIBE (iCIMS), and TrackVia (Primus Capital). Connect with James Falkoff:https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesfalkoff/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesfalkoff/] Connect with Nilanjana Bhowmik:https://www.linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik/] Converge VC Website: https://converge.vc/ [https://converge.vc/] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit postmoneypodcast.substack.com [https://postmoneypodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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25 episodios

episode The Startup Exit Math Every Founder Should Know | Peter Walker, Head of Insights at Carta artwork

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Inside top venture firms, investors are now funding frontier AI research labs before products exist, before revenue exists, and sometimes before there is even a clear path to monetization. The bet is no longer just on software companies, it’s on entirely new forms of intelligence. In this episode of the Post Money Podcast, Raviraj Jain from Lightspeed Venture Partners explains why some of Silicon Valley’s biggest capital pools are shifting toward self-learning systems, humanoid robotics, fusion energy, and AI infrastructure that could redefine how humans work, manufacture, discover new technologies, and generate power over the next decade. Raviraj breaks down why many investors now believe the next leap in AI will happen outside the digital world. Not in chat interfaces or productivity tools, but in machines that can operate in physical environments, understand motion, adapt to unfamiliar situations, and interact with the real world autonomously. He explains why robotics foundation models, reinforcement learning, and multimodal systems are advancing faster than most people realize, and why humanoid robots may arrive much sooner than the public expects. The conversation also gets into the hidden constraints behind the AI boom itself. As data centers become one of the fastest-growing consumers of global energy, technologies once considered unrealistic, including nuclear fusion, are suddenly becoming serious venture-backed bets again. The real question is no longer whether AI will change industries. It’s who will move fast enough to rebuild them before someone else does. Inside the episode: * Why venture firms are now funding pure AI research labs before monetization exists * The case for self-learning AI systems over human-trained models * Why humanoid robots may arrive faster than most people expect * The biggest bottleneck facing AI over the next decade: energy * Why nuclear fusion is suddenly investable again after decades of skepticism * The shift from consumer AI tools to enterprise-wide AI adoption * What early-stage investors now look for in founders during the AI era * Why domain expertise may soon outperform technical expertise again * How AI could completely reshape venture capital workflows and decision-making Watch Full Episode On YouTube About Raviraj Jain: Raviraj Jain is a Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners, where he focuses on enterprise software, AI, cloud infrastructure, machine intelligence, and frontier technologies. Before joining Lightspeed in 2017, he worked across startups and large technology companies in both the US and India, including roles in product and strategy at LinkedIn and Fundbox. Having worked as an entrepreneur, operator, and investor, Raviraj brings a highly product-focused lens to early-stage investing. Raviraj holds an MBA from Harvard Business School and an engineering degree from IIT Bombay. Connect with Raviraj Jain: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ravirajjain/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ravirajjain/] Connect with Nilanjana Bhowmik: linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik] Converge VC website: converge.vc [https://converge.vc/] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit postmoneypodcast.substack.com [https://postmoneypodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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7 de may de 202645 min
episode Anthropic's Mythos: The AI Too Dangerous to Release artwork

Anthropic's Mythos: The AI Too Dangerous to Release

Anthropic just drew a line in the sand. Their latest frontier model MYTHOS is so capable at autonomously discovering and exploiting cybersecurity vulnerabilities that they’ve refused to release it to the public. Instead, it’s being quietly handed to a handful of giants like Microsoft and JP Morgan Chase and top government officials, including the Treasury Secretary and the Fed Chair have already been briefed. In this episode, James Falkoff joins Nilanjana Bhowmik to break down exactly what MYTHOS is, why it’s different from every AI model before it, and why the implications stretch far beyond cybersecurity. Inside the episode: * Why MYTHOS crossed the line that Opus 4.6 didn’t * Why MYTHOS can reverse-engineer closed-source code (including proprietary systems like Windows) to surface vulnerabilities no human ever caught * The shift from human-speed cyberattack to machine-speed and why defense must now match that pace * Why Anthropic chose to restrict access instead of releasing publicly * Why the government took the warning seriously and whether the market did too * The equity crisis hiding inside AI model access * What MYTHOS signals about where open-source models are heading * The growing concern: unequal access to powerful AI systems * Opus 4.7 and the “lazy model” debate * Compute scarcity as the hidden constraint shaping AI progress Watch Full Episode on YouTube About James Falkoff: James has over 16 years of experience investing in technology across public and private markets, including more than a decade in venture capital. He has led over 25 early-stage investments and is known for his thought leadership, strong exit track record, and hands-on work with portfolio companies to drive growth. Before joining Converge, he was a Principal at Longworth Venture Partners, where he partnered with Nilanjana Bhowmik to identify high-potential sectors and secure early access to top startups. His portfolio includes companies like Olapic (acquired by Monotype), RapidMiner (Altair), JIBE (iCIMS), and TrackVia (Primus Capital). Connect with James Falkoff:https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesfalkoff/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesfalkoff/] Connect with Nilanjana Bhowmik:https://www.linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nilanjanabhowmik/] Converge VC Website: https://converge.vc/ [https://converge.vc/] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit postmoneypodcast.substack.com [https://postmoneypodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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