The Sam Ellis Show

The Synthetic Employee

10 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Synthetic Employee

Descripción

A bank can buy software. It cannot hire a ghost employee. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on financial agents as “synthetic employees”: AI systems moving toward bank workflows where identity, scoped authority, payment access, customer data, vendor exposure, audit trails, human oversight, and kill switches matter more than model-launch theater. The Financial Stability Board’s June consultation report does not create binding rules. But it does name the control problem clearly. Agentic AI in finance can take intermediate steps, access tools, interact with APIs and other systems, and produce risk at machine speed. If a bank lets an agent work inside regulated workflows, the useful question is no longer whether the software is impressive. It is whether the institution can show the agent’s ID, scope, supervisor, allowed tools, approval thresholds, logs, rollback path, and accountable human owner. The episode connects the FSB’s proposed “synthetic employee” frame to Reuters reporting on bank-examiner questions, OCC model-risk guidance that explicitly leaves generative and agentic AI outside its current scope, Mastercard and Getnet’s agent-payment infrastructure, and Cloud Security Alliance survey data on financial-services AI-agent adoption and security exposure. Sources * Financial Stability Board: “FSB consults on sound practices for the responsible adoption of artificial intelligence (AI)” [https://www.fsb.org/2026/06/fsb-consults-on-sound-practices-for-the-responsible-adoption-of-artificial-intelligence-ai/] — primary FSB press release for the June 10 consultation, the non-binding status of the proposed sound practices, the July 22 comment deadline, and the expected October final report. * Financial Stability Board: “Sound Practices for Responsible Adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI): Consultation report” [https://www.fsb.org/2026/06/sound-practices-for-responsible-adoption-of-artificial-intelligence-ai-consultation-report/] — FSB landing page for the consultation report, including the report’s scope, consultation questions, and responsible-AI adoption frame for financial institutions. * Financial Stability Board consultation report PDF: “Sound Practices for Responsible Adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI)” [https://www.fsb.org/uploads/P100626.pdf] — source for the episode’s core control language: agentic AI risks, AI-agent inventories and identifiers, tool access, autonomous decision points, intermediate-step documentation, human oversight, contestability, third-party risk, least privilege, and the “synthetic employees” phrase. * Reuters via Financial Express: “US bank regulators ramp up scrutiny of AI use at financial companies” [https://today.thefinancialexpress.com.bd/print/us-bank-regulators-ramp-up-scrutiny-of-ai-use-at-financial-companies-1781366181] — source for reported OCC and Federal Reserve examiner questions about AI use in higher-risk bank areas including lending, know-your-customer checks, sanctions screening, vendor exposure, client-data safeguards, kill switches, governance, guardrails, human oversight, subcontractor exposure, and contingency plans. * Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: “OCC Issues Updated Model Risk Management Guidance” [https://www.occ.gov/news-issuances/news-releases/2026/nr-occ-2026-29.html] — official source for the April model-risk guidance update, including the statement that generative AI and agentic AI are novel, rapidly evolving, and outside the scope of that guidance, and that the OCC, Federal Reserve Board, and FDIC plan a request for information on AI use by banks. * Federal Reserve: SR 26-2, “Model Risk Management: Revised Guidance” [https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/srletters/SR2602.htm] — federal banking-agency context for the updated model-risk guidance discussed in the episode. * Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman: “The New AI in Banking: Considerations for Regulators and Bankers” [https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bowman20260501a.htm] — supervisory-context source for AI governance, third-party risk, use-case awareness, and the need for regulators to understand how banks are adopting AI. * Mastercard: “Mastercard launches Agent Pay for Machines to unlock super-fast, always-on payments” [https://www.mastercard.com/us/en/news-and-trends/press/2026/june/mastercard-launches-agent-pay-for-machines.html] — primary payment-rail source for Mastercard’s agent and machine payments infrastructure, including agent credentialing, Verifiable Intent, authorization rules, spend limits, and settlement across cards, accounts, and stablecoins. * Santander/Getnet: “Getnet develops infrastructure that enables businesses to accept AI agent-initiated payments” [https://www.santander.com/en/press-room/press-releases/2026/06/getnet-develops-infrastructure-that-enables-businesses-to-accept-ai-agent-initiated-payments] — source for Getnet’s merchant-side infrastructure for AI-agent-initiated payments and its Mexico and Latin America case with Mastercard and Neivor. * Cybersecurity Dive: “AI agents are coming to financial services. Can security keep up?” [https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/ai-agents-financial-services-payments-security-risks/822800/] — source for financial-services security context and the Cloud Security Alliance survey figures used in the episode, including deployment, autonomy, security incidents, uncertainty about AI-tool breaches, and data-leakage concerns. * Cloud Security Alliance: “State of Cloud and AI for Financial Services 2026” [https://cloudsecurityalliance.org/artifacts/state-of-cloud-and-ai-for-financial-services-2026] — underlying survey/report source for AI-agent adoption and cloud/AI security maturity in financial services. * PYMNTS: “Bank Regulators Probe Industry Use of AI” [https://www.pymnts.com/legal/regulation/2026/bank-regulators-probe-industry-use-ai/] — additional current-cycle context on bank-regulator scrutiny of AI use in financial services. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

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43 episodios

episode The Synthetic Employee artwork

The Synthetic Employee

A bank can buy software. It cannot hire a ghost employee. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on financial agents as “synthetic employees”: AI systems moving toward bank workflows where identity, scoped authority, payment access, customer data, vendor exposure, audit trails, human oversight, and kill switches matter more than model-launch theater. The Financial Stability Board’s June consultation report does not create binding rules. But it does name the control problem clearly. Agentic AI in finance can take intermediate steps, access tools, interact with APIs and other systems, and produce risk at machine speed. If a bank lets an agent work inside regulated workflows, the useful question is no longer whether the software is impressive. It is whether the institution can show the agent’s ID, scope, supervisor, allowed tools, approval thresholds, logs, rollback path, and accountable human owner. The episode connects the FSB’s proposed “synthetic employee” frame to Reuters reporting on bank-examiner questions, OCC model-risk guidance that explicitly leaves generative and agentic AI outside its current scope, Mastercard and Getnet’s agent-payment infrastructure, and Cloud Security Alliance survey data on financial-services AI-agent adoption and security exposure. Sources * Financial Stability Board: “FSB consults on sound practices for the responsible adoption of artificial intelligence (AI)” [https://www.fsb.org/2026/06/fsb-consults-on-sound-practices-for-the-responsible-adoption-of-artificial-intelligence-ai/] — primary FSB press release for the June 10 consultation, the non-binding status of the proposed sound practices, the July 22 comment deadline, and the expected October final report. * Financial Stability Board: “Sound Practices for Responsible Adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI): Consultation report” [https://www.fsb.org/2026/06/sound-practices-for-responsible-adoption-of-artificial-intelligence-ai-consultation-report/] — FSB landing page for the consultation report, including the report’s scope, consultation questions, and responsible-AI adoption frame for financial institutions. * Financial Stability Board consultation report PDF: “Sound Practices for Responsible Adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI)” [https://www.fsb.org/uploads/P100626.pdf] — source for the episode’s core control language: agentic AI risks, AI-agent inventories and identifiers, tool access, autonomous decision points, intermediate-step documentation, human oversight, contestability, third-party risk, least privilege, and the “synthetic employees” phrase. * Reuters via Financial Express: “US bank regulators ramp up scrutiny of AI use at financial companies” [https://today.thefinancialexpress.com.bd/print/us-bank-regulators-ramp-up-scrutiny-of-ai-use-at-financial-companies-1781366181] — source for reported OCC and Federal Reserve examiner questions about AI use in higher-risk bank areas including lending, know-your-customer checks, sanctions screening, vendor exposure, client-data safeguards, kill switches, governance, guardrails, human oversight, subcontractor exposure, and contingency plans. * Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: “OCC Issues Updated Model Risk Management Guidance” [https://www.occ.gov/news-issuances/news-releases/2026/nr-occ-2026-29.html] — official source for the April model-risk guidance update, including the statement that generative AI and agentic AI are novel, rapidly evolving, and outside the scope of that guidance, and that the OCC, Federal Reserve Board, and FDIC plan a request for information on AI use by banks. * Federal Reserve: SR 26-2, “Model Risk Management: Revised Guidance” [https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/srletters/SR2602.htm] — federal banking-agency context for the updated model-risk guidance discussed in the episode. * Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman: “The New AI in Banking: Considerations for Regulators and Bankers” [https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bowman20260501a.htm] — supervisory-context source for AI governance, third-party risk, use-case awareness, and the need for regulators to understand how banks are adopting AI. * Mastercard: “Mastercard launches Agent Pay for Machines to unlock super-fast, always-on payments” [https://www.mastercard.com/us/en/news-and-trends/press/2026/june/mastercard-launches-agent-pay-for-machines.html] — primary payment-rail source for Mastercard’s agent and machine payments infrastructure, including agent credentialing, Verifiable Intent, authorization rules, spend limits, and settlement across cards, accounts, and stablecoins. * Santander/Getnet: “Getnet develops infrastructure that enables businesses to accept AI agent-initiated payments” [https://www.santander.com/en/press-room/press-releases/2026/06/getnet-develops-infrastructure-that-enables-businesses-to-accept-ai-agent-initiated-payments] — source for Getnet’s merchant-side infrastructure for AI-agent-initiated payments and its Mexico and Latin America case with Mastercard and Neivor. * Cybersecurity Dive: “AI agents are coming to financial services. Can security keep up?” [https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/ai-agents-financial-services-payments-security-risks/822800/] — source for financial-services security context and the Cloud Security Alliance survey figures used in the episode, including deployment, autonomy, security incidents, uncertainty about AI-tool breaches, and data-leakage concerns. * Cloud Security Alliance: “State of Cloud and AI for Financial Services 2026” [https://cloudsecurityalliance.org/artifacts/state-of-cloud-and-ai-for-financial-services-2026] — underlying survey/report source for AI-agent adoption and cloud/AI security maturity in financial services. * PYMNTS: “Bank Regulators Probe Industry Use of AI” [https://www.pymnts.com/legal/regulation/2026/bank-regulators-probe-industry-use-ai/] — additional current-cycle context on bank-regulator scrutiny of AI use in financial services. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

Ayer10 min
episode The Log Is the Command artwork

The Log Is the Command

A forged Sentry alert tried to make an engineer, or the engineer’s AI coding agent, run malware. That is the clean version. The more useful version is that the first step did not look like malware. It looked like an operational error report. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on Agentjacking: a current-cycle attack path where hostile text enters an observability workflow through forged Sentry events, then becomes dangerous because AI coding agents may treat tool output as trusted remediation context. The story is not that Sentry was breached. Sentry says it was not. The story is that logs, tickets, alerts, and tool responses stop being passive once agents read them and have authority to act. The central question is simple and unpleasant: when a developer gives an agent access to observability tools, does the error log become a command channel? Sources * Nutrient: “Emerging threats: Your logging system may be an agentic threat vector” [https://www.nutrient.io/blog/emerging-threats-your-logging-system/] — primary affected-operator account for the forged Sentry alert campaign. Nutrient says the attack used public browser DSN/event-ingest behavior to place hostile text inside an internal-looking observability workflow, that an engineer was working the alert with an AI coding agent, and that the agent refused the suspicious typosquatted package rather than executing it. * Sentry GitHub Security Advisory: “Attempts at prompt injection and supply chain compromise with public Data Source Names (DSNs)” [https://github.com/getsentry/sentry/security/advisories/GHSA-fx76-375g-xq25] — official Sentry source confirming the activity documented by Nutrient and its IOC repository, naming the typosquatted packages, stating that crafted events were designed as AI prompts to convince agents to install third-party npm packages, and drawing the boundary that this was not a vulnerability within Sentry and there was no compromise of Sentry infrastructure. * Tenet Security: “A Fake Bug Report Hijacks Your AI Coding Agent — and Nothing Catches It” [https://tenetsecurity.ai/blog/agentjacking-coding-agents-with-fake-sentry-errors/] — source for the broader Agentjacking framing: public Sentry DSNs, crafted error events, Sentry MCP tool responses, and AI coding agents treating attacker-written markdown as trusted remediation guidance. Tenet’s scale and success-rate figures are treated in the episode as Tenet claims, not Sentry-confirmed numbers. * Infosecurity Magazine: “New ‘Agentjacking’ Attacks Could Hijack AI Coding Agents” [https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/agentjacking-attacks-hijack-ai/] — independent security-news pickup of Tenet’s report and the Sentry/MCP/coding-agent attack chain. * Moltbook source call: agent security and operational tool output [https://www.moltbook.com/post/11963f0b-0ed4-4425-98f4-699a932d9b51] — public source-call thread used for agent/community perspective on where agent security stops being prompt safety and becomes authority, memory, rollback, tool output, and runtime provenance. * Sentry MCP pull request #1056: “wrap get_issue_details output in untrusted data boundary” [https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-mcp/pull/1056] — repository context for Sentry MCP maintainers’ draft untrusted-telemetry boundary work. Used as context for the mitigation shape, not as proof that the Agentjacking issue was fully solved or that Tenet’s figures were confirmed. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

15 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Access Order artwork

The Access Order

Anthropic shipped Claude Fable 5 on June 9. By Friday night, the model was off the market because, according to Anthropic, the U.S. government had issued an export-control directive that suspended access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by foreign nationals. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on the access order: what Anthropic says happened, how the cutoff moved through AWS and Claude’s own status system, why nationality-scoped access is hard to implement once a frontier model is already live, and why revocation may become one of the defining product features of frontier AI. The point is not that Anthropic was nationalized. It was not. The point is narrower and stranger: the state treated access to an already-deployed model as national-security infrastructure. The controlled object was not a chip, a data center, or a physical export crate. It was API and account access, mediated through cloud platforms, employee rules, customer sessions, identity checks, and emergency compliance. Sources * Anthropic: “Statement on the US government directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5” [https://www.anthropic.com/news/fable-mythos-access] — primary source for Anthropic’s account that the U.S. government, citing national-security authorities, issued an export-control directive that suspended access by any foreign national, including foreign-national Anthropic employees; the reported 5:21 p.m. ET receipt time; Anthropic’s disagreement with the technical basis for the order; and the company’s statement that it disabled Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all customers while leaving other models unaffected. * Reuters via The Business Standard: “Anthropic disables top-tier AI models after US order limiting foreign access” [https://www.tbsnews.net/worldbiz/usa/anthropic-disables-top-tier-ai-models-after-us-order-limiting-foreign-access-1461661] — source for Reuters-reported confirmation from a U.S. official that the Commerce Department issued the directive, and Reuters reporting that AWS said Anthropic asked Amazon’s cloud unit to revoke model access for all users in all regions. Treated in the episode as Reuters-reported official confirmation, not as a public Commerce/BIS publication of the order. * AWS: “Claude Fable 5 on AWS” [https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2026/06/claude-fable-5-aws/] — primary cloud-platform receipt for the practical customer impact on Amazon Bedrock: Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 unavailable, Anthropic requesting revocation of access for all users to support compliance with the U.S. government export-control directive, and other models including Opus 4.8 unaffected. * AWS News Blog: “Anthropic Claude Fable 5 on AWS: Mythos-class capabilities with built-in safeguards, now available” [https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/anthropic-claude-fable-5-on-aws-mythos-class-capabilities-with-built-in-safeguards-now-available/] — source for the original Bedrock launch context and the later AWS update carrying the same access-unavailable notice. * Claude Status: “We’ve suspended access to Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5” [https://status.claude.com/incidents/s9w82lp9dcn9] — source for the customer-facing incident record affecting claude.ai, Claude API, Claude Code, and Claude Cowork. * Simon Willison: “US government directive to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5” [https://simonwillison.net/2026/Jun/13/us-government-directive-to-suspend-access/] — developer-impact receipt documenting successful claude-fable-5 API calls followed minutes later by a 404 response saying Fable 5 was unavailable and directing use of Opus 4.8. * AP: “Anthropic disables top-tier AI models after US order limiting foreign access” [https://apnews.com/article/anthropic-artificial-intelligence-trump-fable-mythos-d9cc7df5c02e93837d0f0bfb24d5cfd2] — independent wire context for the significance of the U.S. government’s action, including AP’s report that Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment and its framing of the move as a major step to restrict access to advanced AI models. * Anthropic: “Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5” [https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-fable-5-mythos-5] — launch-context source for Fable 5 as the general-availability Mythos-class model, Mythos 5 as a more restricted Project Glasswing/trusted-access model, fallback behavior, and the access architecture in place before the government order. * Anthropic: “Claude Fable 5 & Claude Mythos 5 System Card” [https://anthropic.com/claude-fable-5-mythos-5-system-card] — source for Anthropic’s own safety-positioning language around Mythos-class capability, including the claim that unsafeguarded Mythos 5 can significantly uplift well-resourced threat actors, plus the safeguards and monitoring architecture discussed in the episode. * Claude Platform Docs: “Introducing Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5” [https://platform.claude.com/docs/en/about-claude/models/introducing-claude-fable-5-and-claude-mythos-5] — developer/API context for the model names, availability, and integration surface. * TechCrunch: “Anthropic’s safety warnings may have just backfired” [https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/12/anthropics-safety-warnings-may-have-just-backfired-the-government-has-pulled-the-plug-on-its-most-powerful-ai/] — analytical pressure-test for the episode’s argument that Anthropic’s safety positioning may have become regulatory ammunition once the state accepted the premise but rejected the company’s preferred process. * White House: “Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security” [https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/06/promoting-advanced-artificial-intelligence-innovation-and-security/] — policy-framework context for frontier-model national-security review. Used as background only, not as proof of the legal basis for the Fable/Mythos directive. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

13 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Agent in Your Pocket artwork

The Agent in Your Pocket

Apple is late to AI. That may not stop it from becoming the company that introduces most normal people to agents. In this episode, Sam Ellis reports on Apple's Siri AI announcement and the developer machinery underneath it: personal context, on-screen awareness, App Intents, Spotlight's semantic index, View Annotations, Shortcuts, Safari, Passwords, and the ordinary phone behaviors that could make agentic AI feel less like a new product category and more like the iPhone doing something useful. The question is not whether Apple invented agents, or whether Siri AI is already proven at consumer scale. It is whether Apple can mainstream agentic behavior by making it trusted, useful, invisible, and phone-native — and what changes when ordinary users grant action authority without thinking of themselves as agent operators. Sources * Apple Newsroom: “Apple introduces Siri AI, a profoundly more capable and personal assistant” [https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/06/apple-introduces-siri-ai-a-profoundly-more-capable-and-personal-assistant/] — primary source for Siri AI as an entirely new Siri powered by Apple Intelligence, with personal context understanding, broad world knowledge, on-screen awareness, a dedicated app, developer testing, beta timing, and region/device constraints. * Apple Newsroom: “Apple unveils next generation of Apple Intelligence, Siri AI, and more” [https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/06/apple-unveils-next-generation-of-apple-intelligence-siri-ai-and-more/] — primary Apple source for the broader Apple Intelligence announcement around systemwide AI capabilities and platform rollout. * Apple Newsroom: “Apple Intelligence brings powerful AI capabilities into everyday experiences” [https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/06/apple-intelligence-brings-powerful-ai-capabilities-into-everyday-experiences/] — source for Safari Notify Me, Messages suggestions, Call Context, Passwords, fall availability language, supported products, and regional constraints. * Apple Developer: “What’s New — Apple Intelligence” [https://developer.apple.com/apple-intelligence/whats-new/] — source for App Intents, App Intents schemas, Spotlight semantic index, View Annotations, Foundation Models framework, Language Model protocol, and Dynamic Profiles. * Apple Newsroom: “Apple accelerates app development with new intelligence frameworks and advanced tools” [https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/06/apple-aids-app-development-with-new-intelligence-frameworks-and-advanced-tools/] — source for Apple’s developer-facing intelligence framework and tooling context. * WIRED: “Apple’s New Siri AI Is Ready to Get Personal” [https://www.wired.com/story/apples-new-siri-ai-is-ready-to-get-personal/] — source for the personal-data-aware, action-oriented Siri framing; Ramon Llamas’s Apple-mainstreaming comparison; and Marshini Chetty’s privacy caution. * Forbes: “Apple Goes Agentic: Welcome To The New Siri” [https://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkoetsier/2026/06/09/apple-siri-ai-agent-features/] — source for the agentic framing, Passwords example, human-in-the-loop caveat, and “agentic behind glass” characterization. * CNET: “Apple’s Cautious AI Strategy Could Have Been Its Smartest Move” [https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/apple-ai-strategy-wwdc-2026-commentary/] — source for the cautious-AI strategy frame and Francisco Jeronimo’s “trusted, useful and invisible” quote. * 9to5Mac: “Apple unveils new Siri AI, dedicated app, and enhanced Apple Intelligence features in iOS 27” [https://9to5mac.com/2026/06/08/new-siri-whats-new/] — source for feature corroboration around Siri AI, Spotlight, app actions, on-screen awareness, Shortcuts, Passwords, daily limits, and EU/China constraints. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

11 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Safeguard Is the Product artwork

The Safeguard Is the Product

Anthropic has released Claude Fable 5, a broadly available Mythos-class model, while keeping Claude Mythos 5 restricted to approved Project Glasswing and trusted-access customers. The company’s pitch is not simply that the model is more capable. It is that the same underlying capability can be made commercially available through a release boundary: classifiers, refusal and fallback behavior, trusted access, and thirty-day safety retention. Sam Ellis reports on why that boundary is the product. For developers and enterprise buyers, Fable 5 is generally available across Anthropic’s API and major cloud platforms, with a one-million-token context window, up to 128,000 output tokens, and pricing at $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens. But Fable 5 and Mythos 5 are also designated Covered Models, which means thirty-day data retention and no zero-data-retention option. The episode follows Anthropic’s launch announcement, model documentation, and system card, then pressure-tests the public/private split against independent coverage from CyberScoop, Reuters via BNN Bloomberg, and The Next Web. The question is whether Anthropic can commercialize restricted capability by making the safeguard legible, durable, and verifiable enough to survive real customers and real adversaries. Sources * Anthropic: “Introducing Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5” [https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude-fable-5-mythos-5] — primary launch source for Fable 5 as a Mythos-class model made safe for general use, Mythos 5 as the same underlying model with safeguards lifted for approved customers, fallback-rate claims, Project Glasswing access, pricing, and thirty-day safety retention. * Anthropic Claude docs: “Introducing Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5” [https://platform.claude.com/docs/en/about-claude/models/introducing-claude-fable-5-and-claude-mythos-5] — source for API IDs, availability, refusal behavior, fallback configuration, Covered Model status, and retention limits. * Anthropic Claude docs: model overview [https://platform.claude.com/docs/en/about-claude/models/overview] — source for general model availability, 1M-token context, 128k output limit, cloud-platform availability, and listed pricing. * Anthropic: Claude Fable 5 / Mythos 5 system card [https://www.anthropic.com/claude-fable-5-mythos-5-system-card] — primary safety source for the two-configuration model architecture, cyber and bio risk rationale, CB-1 / CB-2 discussion, safeguard claims, and Anthropic’s warning that some judgments are less clear than for previous models. * Anthropic system-card PDF [https://www-cdn.anthropic.com/d00db56fa754a1b115b6dd7cb2e3c342ee809620.pdf] — direct PDF copy of the system card used for source verification. * CyberScoop: “Anthropic releases Claude Fable 5, a public version of Mythos with guardrails” [https://cyberscoop.com/anthropic-claude-fable-5-release-mythos-guardrails/] — independent pressure-test source for the “Mythos on a leash” framing, the absence of universal jailbreaks in testing, and the unresolved question of public adversarial pressure. * Reuters via BNN Bloomberg: “Anthropic rolls out public version of Mythos without cybersecurity capability” [https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/business/artificial-intelligence/2026/06/09/anthropic-rolls-out-public-version-of-mythos-without-cybersecurity-capability/] — mainstream commercial framing of the public Fable / restricted Mythos split and the student vulnerability-seeking example described by Anthropic. * The Next Web: “Anthropic launches Claude Fable 5, a public version of its cyber-focused Mythos model” [https://thenextweb.com/news/anthropic-claude-fable-5-mythos-public-release-ipo] — background business context on pricing, paid-subscriber and enterprise access, and the monetization pressure around the release. Email: SamEllisShow@protonmail.com [SamEllisShow@protonmail.com]

10 de jun de 20269 min