

LLMs can be useful in this context, but Anthropic blew Mythos way way out of proportion. It absolutely was overly hyped.
Their own demonstrator had to work with a downlevel firefox so it would still have vulnerabilities that were already fixed before they even started.
It seems that their narrative is that other tools, some LLM and some not may be as good or better than Mythos at finding issues, but there were a couple of issues where Mythos was able to actually create a demonstrator, which the other models did not do. Which is relatively less interesting, as a human going from finding to demonstrator is generally not a huge part of the tedium, the tedium usually is in the finding.
They pitched it as “it is dangerous, it will escape confinement”, etc etc. But instead they had to explicitly start with a downlevel firefox with known vulnerabilities unpatched and they further had to disable all the security mitigations that in practice had already made the two “vulnerabilities” impossible to exploit.
It’s a matter of degree and exaggeration.




Is a bit hyperbole at the moment, where the concrete lawd are basically “os asks user for age on honor system and relays that to websites”. Linux distros can add that without much real controversy.
Proven is some are seeking laws that require the os to actually verify age, which in practice means locking things behind something like a Google account and having an online account vendor process your real identity and really validate your age. Under such a regime, Linux desktop as it exists today becomes infeasible. Also Microsoft can say they absolutely cannot allow local accounts anymore by law and force Microsoft accounts…