惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
V
V2EX
G
Google Developers Blog
F
Full Disclosure
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
A
About on SuperTechFans
The Cloudflare Blog
C
Cisco Blogs
D
DataBreaches.Net
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Vercel News
Vercel News
P
Privacy International News Feed
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
S
Schneier on Security
AI
AI
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
雷峰网
雷峰网
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
P
Proofpoint News Feed
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
S
Securelist
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
博客园_首页
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Project Zero
Project Zero
C
Check Point Blog
S
Security Affairs

Hacker News: Best

madhadron - The seven programming ur-languages GitHub - smol-machines/smolvm: Tool to build & run portable, lightweight, self-contained virtual machines. I Measured Claude 4.7's New Tokenizer. Here's What It Costs You. Introducing Claude Design by Anthropic Labs It Is Time to Ban the Sale of Precise Geolocation The creative software industry has declared war on Adobe Isaac Asimov: The Last Question Newly unsealed records reveal Amazon’s price-fixing tactics, California attorney general claims Clojure - Documentary Android CLI and skills: Build Android apps 3x faster using any agent Qwen3.6-35B-A3B on my laptop drew me a better pelican than Claude Opus 4.7 Codex for almost everything Introducing Claude Opus 4.7 Qwen Studio The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Where Do We Go From Here? Virginia Bans Sale of Geolocation Data YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts Burgers | マクドナルド公式 ChatGPT for Excel Ask HN: Who is using OpenClaw? Live Nation illegally monopolized ticketing market, jury finds Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data. Open Source Isn't Dead. The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: New Jobs Unexpected €54k billing spike in 13 hours: Firebase browser key without API restrictions used for Gemini requests IPv6 – Google Your Backpack Got Worse On Purpose Good sleep, good learning, good life Fixing a 20-year-old bug in Enlightenment E16. Does Gas Town 'steal' usage from users' LLM credits & paid services to improve itself? Tell HN: Fiverr left customer files public and searchable Cybersecurity Looks Like Proof of Work Now Getting the Flock out Release OpenSSL 4.0.0 · openssl/openssl Internet será irrespirable los días de fútbol y otros deportes. Telefónica extiende los bloqueos a Champions, tenis y golf. Automate work with routines - Claude Code Docs The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Work Thousands of rare concert recordings are landing on the Internet Archive — listen now What is jj and why should I care? Backblaze has quietly stopped backing up your data Cal.com Goes Closed Source: Why AI Security Is Forcing Our Decision | Cal.com - Scheduling Software for Online Bookings Codex Hacked a Samsung TV The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Safety GitHub - sterlingcrispin/nothing-ever-happens: Polymarket bot that buys "No" on all non-sports markets. For entertainment only, mostly a meme. Make tmux Pretty and Usable - Ham Vocke Microsoft isn't removing Copilot from Windows 11, it's just renaming it Servo is now available on crates.io - Servo aims to empower developers with a lightweight, high-performance alternative for embedding web technologies in applications. We May Be Living Through the Most Consequential Hundred Days in Cyber History, and Almost Nobody Has Noticed All elementary functions from a single binary operator 奈拜提耶市 Seven countries now generate 100% of their electricity from renewable energy Pro Max 5x Quota Exhausted in 1.5 Hours Despite Moderate Usage Tell HN: docker pull fails in spain due to football cloudflare block Bring Back Idiomatic Design @adlrocha - How the "AI Loser" may end up winning Apple update turns Czech mate for locked-out iPhone user Cache TTL silently regressed from 1h to 5m around early March 2026, causing quota and cost inflation The peril of laziness lost AI Will Be Met With Violence, and Nothing Good Will Come of It Center for Responsible, Decentralized Intelligence at Berkeley The disturbing white paper Red Hat is trying to erase from the internet – OSnews The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Annoyances 447 Terabytes per Square Centimetre at Zero Retention Energy: Non-Volatile Memory at the Atomic Scale on Fluorographane Show HN: Pardonned.com – A searchable database of US Pardons 20 Years on AWS and Never Not My Job Artemis II crew splashes down near San Diego after historic moon mission Molotov Cocktail Is Hurled at Home of Sam Altman, OpenAI’s CEO France to ditch Windows for Linux to reduce reliance on US tech On filing the corners off my MacBooks Installing every* Firefox extension Chimpanzees in Uganda locked in vicious 'civil war', say researchers linux/Documentation/process/coding-assistants.rst at master · torvalds/linux GitHub - callumlocke/json-formatter: Makes JSON easy to read. A compelling title that is cryptic enough to get you to take action on it GitHub - Keychron/Keychron-Keyboards-Hardware-Design: Industrial design files for Keychron keyboards and mice. 100+ models with CAD assets in STEP, DXF, DWG, and PDF. Source-available, with commercial use allowed for original compatible accessories within the license terms. [ANNOUNCE] WireGuardNT v0.11 and WireGuard for Windows v0.6 Released 1D-Chess Helium Is Hard to Replace FBI used iPhone notification data to retrieve deleted Signal messages Microsoft suspends dev accounts for high-profile open source projects Why you can’t trust Privacy & Security Serenity Forge (@serenityforge.com) A new trick brings stability to quantum operations OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit Liability for AI-Enabled Mass Deaths or Financial Disasters Netflix Prices Went Up Again – I Bought a DVD Player Instead DOJ Wants to Scrap Watergate-Era Rule That Makes Presidential Records Public EFF is Leaving X How NASA built Artemis II’s fault-tolerant computer Meta removes ads for social media addiction litigation How Pizza Tycoon simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU Claude mixes up who said what, and that's not OK Reallocating $100/Month Claude Code spend to Zed and OpenRouter Help Keep Thunderbird Alive! Why Are Flock Employees Watching Our Children? The Pentagon Threatened Pope Leo XIV’s Ambassador With the Avignon Papacy Fragments: April 2 Native Instant Space Switching on MacOS Bitcoin miners are losing $19,000 on every BTC produced as difficulty drops 7.8% God sleeps in the minerals Apple Silicon and Virtual Machines: Beating the 2 VM Limit
Why AI companies want you to be afraid of them
rolph · 2026-04-29 · via Hacker News: Best

Thomas Germain

Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images Several hands hold computer windows with "X" and exclamation point warning signs over a desktop screen that says "AI" (Credit: Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images)Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images

They built it. They're scared of it. They're selling it anyway.

Stop me if you've heard this one before: a tech company says it's built a new AI that's so powerful it's scary. Apparently, it's too dangerous to release into the world – the consequences would be catastrophic. Luckily for us, they are keeping it locked up for now. They just wanted you to know.

That's exactly what AI company Anthropic is telling us about its latest model, Claude Mythos. The company says Mythos' ability to find cybersecurity bugs far surpasses human experts, and it could have world-altering consequences if similar technology lands in the wrong hands. "The fallout – for economies, public safety and national security – could be severe," Anthropic said in an early April blog post. Some breathless observers warned that Mythos will soon force you to replace every piece of technology in your life, down to your WiFi-enabled microwave, to protect from the digital madness.

Some security experts doubt these claims, but let's set that aside. This isn't new. Executives at leading AI providers regularly issue warnings about how their industry's products may destroy humanity. Why do AI companies want us to be afraid of them?

It's a strange way for any company to talk about its own work. You don't hear McDonald's announcing that it's created a burger so terrifyingly delicious that it would be unethical to grill it for the public.

Here's one theory. According to critics, it benefits AI companies to keep you fixated on apocalypse because it distracts from the very real damage they're already doing to the world. Tech leaders say they're just warning us about an inevitable future, and safety is a top priority whether it's now or later. But others argue what we're actually seeing is fear mongering, which exaggerates the potential of the technology and serves to boost stock prices. And it encourages a narrative that regulators must stand aside, because these AI companies are the only ones who can stop the bad guys and build this technology responsibly.

"If you portray these technologies as somehow almost supernatural in their danger, it makes us feel like we are powerless, like we are outmatched," says Shannon Vallor, a professor of the ethics of data and artificial intelligence at the University of Edinburgh in the UK. "As if the only people we could possibly look to would be the companies themselves."

Somebody stop me

An Anthropic spokesperson told me the company has been clear about these issues. They shared blog posts from other organisations supporting Mythos' cyber capabilities, but said nothing to address the points in this article, aside from one comment I'll include below.

This isn't the first time Anthropic chief Dario Amodei has worked on a tool that's been declared too dangerous for the public by the company he worked for. In 2019, when Amodei was an executive at OpenAI, the company announced GPT-2. He and other company leaders said they just couldn't release GPT-2 because of "concerns about malicious applications of the technology". This was a tool far less sophisticated than ChatGPT. And months later, they released it anyway. (OpenAI CEO Sam Altman published a blog post which says the company embraces uncertainty, acknowledging that fears about GPT-2 were "misplaced".)

Altman criticised Anthropic's "fear-based marketing" in a recent podcast interview. But his own "I've created a monster" playbook goes back years.

"AI will probably most likely lead to the end of the world, but in the meantime, there'll be great companies," Altman said in 2015. Years later, Altman claimed he loses sleep wondering if he's "done something really bad by launching ChatGPT". If only someone warned him.

Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images AI companies say their technology could end the world. They also want you to buy it (Credit: Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images)Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images

AI companies say their technology could end the world. They also want you to buy it (Credit: Serenity Strull/ BBC/ Getty Images)

Hundreds of tech leaders including Altman, Amodei, Bill Gates and Demis Hassabis, chief executive of Google DeepMind, endorsed a short statement in 2023 that said: "Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war." The same year, moguls including Elon Musk signed a letter calling for a six-month pause on building advanced AI. Musk announced his new artificial intelligence company xAI less than six months later.

"It's just part of this pattern of unsubstantiated claims of power," says Emily M Bender, a professor of computational linguistics and natural language processing at the University of Washington, and co-author of the book The AI Con. This isn't limited to OpenAI and Anthropic, she says, it's the standard posture for the whole AI industry. "They're saying 'look over here', never mind the environmental destruction and the labour exploitation and all these systems we're destroying in society. We just have to worry about making sure this thing doesn't turn into the bad one that destroys humanity."

I asked OpenAI about all this. A spokesperson shared a recent blog post from Altman where he wrote that OpenAI would "resist the potential of this technology to consolidate power in the hands of the few", adding that "key decisions about AI are made via democratic processes and with egalitarian principles, and not just made by AI labs".

Is Mythos really that bad?

Anthropic says its new model already found thousands of "high-severity" vulnerabilities across the tech landscape at a level that surpasses human experts. It also announced a new partnership with more than 40 companies and groups in an "urgent attempt" to patch vulnerabilities before hackers get a chance. A company spokesperson told me Anthropic has been intentional about partnering with organisations to patch the foundational computing systems which represent the "lion's share" of the problem.

But there are significant doubts about those claims, and Heidy Khlaaf, chief AI scientist at the AI Now Institute, wasn't impressed. She's spent her career building and auditing the exact kinds of code analysis tools that Anthropic suggests it's surpassed. She's also worked on digital safety in nuclear facilities.

Khlaaf says the biggest red flag was the lack of false positive rates – an industry-standard measure of how often a security tool flags something that isn't a real problem. "This is not some unknown metric," Khlaaf says. "This is kind of the largest indicator of how useful your tool is." Anthropic didn't mention it and sidestepped the question when I asked for comment. Nor did Anthropic measure Mythos against existing tools that security engineers have relied on for decades.

There have also been some claims that Anthropic may have held back a wide release of Mythos because it couldn't afford the necessary computing power. Anthropic didn't respond when I asked about that, either.

None of this is to say that the threat is imaginary. "Mythos might be capable," Khlaaf says. AI tools are genuinely well-suited for scanning massive code bases, and automatically finding security vulnerabilities is a real and pressing danger. But Khlaaf is sceptical about Anthropic's claims without being able to substantiate them. "I think there are a lot of cracks in this narrative that Mythos is all powerful, we can't release it."

The Interface

Why so serious?

Preventing the end of the world is why OpenAI and Anthropic say they exist in the first place. OpenAI was founded as a non-profit, promising to build AI in a way that's safe before supposedly less responsible tech giants like Google and Meta got there first. Later, a splinter group left OpenAI to form Anthropic because they said their old employer wasn't dedicated enough to safety. Now, both organisations are working to become publicly traded companies and sell shares on the stock market.

"If you want to understand how an organisation, particularly a corporation, is going to behave, look at what its incentives are," says Vallor.

Google dropped its red lines around building AI weapons. OpenAI fought a legal battle to shed its non-profit status. Anthropic abandoned its flagship policy to never train an AI model if the company couldn't guarantee adequate safety measures.

"I would not count on [any of these companies] to walk away from the opportunity to dominate the market in order to remain the good guy," says Vallor.

AI companies say they take these issues seriously. OpenAI sent me links to its stance on mental health, AI accuracy, fraud and scams, and Altman says the company is committed to addressing the problems at every stage of AI development.

But there's a reason these companies only sound the alarm for the apocalypse, says Vallor. If AI might destroy society, these other problems seem a lot less significant. "The strategy has worked," she says. "Talking about their products as if they could end the world has not hurt these companies. It has not limited their power. If anything, it makes people feel like the only ones they could possibly look to for protection are the companies themselves."

Demons or messiahs

In almost the same breath, some of the people who warn of destruction also promise salvation. In a 2024 essay, Altman predicts "astounding triumphs – fixing the climate, establishing a space colony and the discovery of all of physics – will eventually become commonplace". Amodei promised "a country of geniuses in a datacenter".

Utopia and apocalypse are just two sides of the same coin, according to Vallor. "In either case, the scale is far too grand and mythic for things like regulation, or governance or court law to feel like you can get purchase on it," she says. "It leads people to believe that all they can do is sit back and wait to find out whether these technologies turn out to be civilisation-ending demons, or utopia-gifting messiahs." Even the name "Mythos" seems designed to inspire religious awe.

More like this:

But these aren't gods, they're products built by companies, for profit, says Vallor. And we've regulated things far more threatening than chatbots. "Every technology, save this one, even nuclear, even biological weapons, in no other case have we allowed these narratives to make us think these are forces beyond human control," she says. "Nothing about them is ungovernable. Unless we choose not to govern them."

Let's be clear: it is theoretically possible that AI will take over the world. I'm no fortune teller. But ask yourself, does that idea sound similar to other stories you've heard out of Silicon Valley in the past?

Weren't we all supposed to be living in Mark Zuckerberg's Metaverse by now? Wasn't Bitcoin going to replace all the world's currency? Remember back in the 2010s, when we heard about how social media would save democracy? All of these things could still happen. Or maybe they won't.

--

For timely, trusted tech news from global correspondents to your inbox, sign up to the Tech Decoded newsletter, while The Essential List delivers a handpicked selection of features and insights twice a week.

For more science, technology, environment and health stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook and Instagram.