Mythos

8 items

The Atlantic 2026-05-18-1

AI Has Broken Containment

Wong's piece isn't a structural update — every event he cites is recycled public record from the past six months. What's new is that The Atlantic, NYT, Economist, Bloomberg, and Hard Fork have consolidated a unified "AI is no longer compartmentalizable" frame inside 30 days. The Cold War metaphor migration — containment, arms race, geopolitical actors — imports a specific policy menu (export controls, pre-release licensing, technology denial), and Anthropic and OpenAI will IPO into that frame, not the prior permissive one.

New York Times 2026-05-14-1

Google Says Criminal Hackers Used A.I. to Find a Major Software Flaw

Google's criminal AI zero-day confirms the new attack topology: AI compressed bug discovery to near-zero cost, but the attacker still needed credentials and the patch cycle still ran in days. The asymmetric trade sits in IAM hardening and patch-velocity infrastructure. The AI-security pure-plays are already priced for the headline; the credential layer is what actually moved.

The New York Times 2026-05-12-2

Google Says Criminal Hackers Used A.I. to Find a Major Software Flaw

AI compressed vulnerability discovery to near-zero cost; credentialed access remained the second gate. Google's disclosure of the first criminal AI-enabled zero-day is the empirical confirmation that the offense-side binding constraint has shifted from bug-finding to credential acquisition, which re-rates the IAM stack more cleanly than the AI-security pure-plays. Rob Joyce's "fingerprint at the crime scene" line points to a parallel category in forensic AI-authorship detection that remains structurally unfilled.

Financial Times · 2026-05-04 2026-05-09-w1

Hedge funds seek an edge by using AI's speed

AIMA's survey of $788bn in hedge fund assets found 95% AI adoption and under 5% using it for portfolio optimization. That gap is not a maturity curve; it is a fiduciary ceiling with no infrastructure underneath it. Sand Grove's Caplan says the judgment layer above AI is permanent even in the long run, and Anaconda and Pharo confirm the pattern independently: AI handles documents and back office, stops at security selection. What's gating deployment isn't model quality; it's the absence of a scoring layer that lets a CRO sign off on broader scope without carrying personal liability for the output. The same ceiling shows up in Anthropic's interpretability work: once cognition is auditable, alignment posture becomes a measurable input rather than a vendor claim, and procurement frameworks aren't built for either. The next decade of enterprise AI value capture sits in whoever builds that infrastructure, not in whoever ships the next model.

Bloomberg 2026-05-09-2

AI Is Making Digital Fraud Easier, Faster and Harder to Stop

Breach notifications to victims fell 79% last year while breaches hit a record high — the disclosure regime didn't get repealed, it decayed through underuse. Companies underdisclose, states underenforce, and the cost lands on consumers and small banks while AI defense vendors capture the rents. The structural fix — continuous identity attestation at the rails layer — is the same control plane the agentic enterprise stack needs, which means two demand vectors pointing at the same consolidation.

Financial Times 2026-05-04-2

Hedge funds seek an edge by using AI's speed

AIMA's $788bn hedge fund survey shows 95% AI adoption against under 5% using it for portfolio optimization; that gap is not a maturity curve, it is the verification ceiling in a fiduciary domain. Sand Grove's Caplan frames the judgment layer above AI as permanent, even in the long term, and Anaconda and Pharo confirm the same pattern: AI for documents and back office, never for security selection. The next decade of enterprise AI value capture sits in the scoring infrastructure that lets a CRO sign off on broader scope, not in a better model.

The Atlantic 2026-05-02-2

So, About That AI Bubble

Anthropic's run rate doubled from $14B to $30B in two months, the METR study reversed from -20% to +20% developer productivity with current tooling, and some firms are now spending 10% of total engineering labor cost on AI subscriptions: the revenue story is no longer contested. The load-bearing extension claim, MIT's projection that AI completes 80-95% of white-collar tasks by 2029, rests on a linear extrapolation from two data points and an s-curve that doesn't bend. That's the overshoot zone: coding gains are real and documented; legal, marketing, and consulting at the same velocity is a 2027-2028 question, and the piece elides gross margins entirely, which remains the actual bear thesis.

tanyaverma.sh 2026-04-13-1

The Closing of the Frontier

Two-thirds of MATS symposium research posters ran on Chinese open-source models because Anthropic's Mythos restrictions closed off Western frontier access to independent safety researchers. The safety case for restricted access is degrading the safety research pipeline it claims to protect. The policy question isn't content moderation: it's whether frontier model access needs due process obligations the way utilities do.