By Tom Sims
FRANKFURT, April 16 (Reuters) – German banks and national authorities are examining risks around Anthropic’s new artificial intelligence model, an โofficial said on Thursday, amid concerns that it could fuel โcyberattacks.
Kolja Gabriel, a member of the executive board at the German Banking Association, told Reuters โthat the group was consulting with cyber experts at its member banks as well as Germany’s finance ministry and other authorities.
Anthropic’s Mythos is seen by cybersecurity experts as posing significant challenges to the banking sector and its โlegacy technology systems, raising โ alarm bells among regulators in Britain and the United States.
“Mythos is being used in a controlled manner by IT โ security firms to close potential vulnerabilities as quickly as possible. We expect a series of software updates shortly and are closely monitoring developments,” Gabriel, who โis responsible โfor technology and innovation, said in โan emailed statement.
The talks also โinvolve the Bundesbank and Germany’s financial watchdog BaFin.
The finance ministry declined to comment, while the central bank did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
BaFin said that there are regular exchanges with relevant national, European and international stakeholders.
“Financial firms must be prepared for the possibility that vulnerabilities could โbe discovered in the near future, which โwould then need to be addressed promptly โand quickly,” BaFin said in โa statement.
Reuters reported on Thursday that European Central Bank โsupervisors are set to quiz bankers โabout the risks of โMythos.
Anthropic has said its current iteration, Claude Mythos Preview, will not be made generally available and has instead announced Project Glasswing.
It โinvited major tech companies, โcybersecurity vendors and JPMorgan Chase, along with several dozen other organizations, โto privately evaluate this model and prepare defences accordingly.
(Reporting by โTom Sims; Editing by Alexander Smith)