Over the weekend, something crazy happened. Just three days after the release of Claude Fable, the US government stepped in and curb stomped it in the

name of national security. And that's bad news if you just FOMO subscribe to Claude Pro to try out Fable because now you'll see this disappointing

message if you try to use it and instead be forced to use the negative IQ Opus 4.8. But it's all for

your own good because it only took someone a few hours to jailbreak Fable and turn it into an unstoppable cyber weapon. And that's pretty ironic

because here in the land of the free, an American company that will not stop talking about AI safety just got safetied by its own government. In

today's video, we'll find out how and why our dear leaders in government are keeping us safe from the horrors

of linear algebra. It is June 15th, 2026, and you're watching the code report. About 2 months ago on April 7th, we were first introduced to Mythos 5,

the raw, unmuzzled model with the strongest cyber security capabilities of anything out there. But it was locked behind a program called Glass Wing,

only available to trusted partners like major corporations and the US government itself. The reason

Mythos can't be given to normies though is because it could easily be used as a cyber weapon in the wrong hands. To prevent that, Anthropic created a

different product called Fable 5, which is literally the same exact model, but with safety classifiers bolted on. That means if you ask it to do bad

things, like create an MPM package that turns the banking system into a Minecraft server, Fable's

guardrails will reroute your request to Opus 4.8 before a dumber, more wholesome response. So basically, Mythos and Fable have the same brain, but

Fable has a child lock on it. Fable went public and gained hundreds of millions of users overnight, and it was awesome. It was by far the best coding

AI model I've ever used, and people were building all sorts of crazy apps with it. Life was good for

about 3 days. Then, of course, an anonymous internet user who goes by Plenty the Liberator that defeats the guard rails and jailbreaks it. He's

basically the internet's let's see if I can penetrate this thing guy and is famous for breaking other AI systems. And on June 10th, he post a

jailbreak on X claiming he popped Fable's guardrails wide open and got it producing exactly the same stuff the

Child Lock was built to block. And that's despite the fact that Anthropic had spent thousands of hours redeeming and trying to break its own

guardrails internally. But the jailbreak wasn't some kind of sci-fi exploit. It actually works a lot more like moneyaundering. If Fable has a safety

classifier watching for bad requests, but you can break dirty requests down into smaller innocent looking

fragments by wrapping them in weird unicode characters by doing role-play farming or by confusing the model in a very large context conversation due

to national security. I can't be any more specific than that. But this weakness was brought to Anthropic's attention and they were initially asked to

take the model down, but they refused. Then on Friday at 5:21 p.m. Eastern time, Anthropic gets a

letter not from a customer, but from the United States government. This letter was an export control directive signed off by Commerce Secretary Howard

Lutnik. And the order was that no foreign national may access Fable 5 or Mythos 5. Not abroad, not in the US, and not even Anthropic's own foreignb

born employees are allowed to touch it. That last one is pretty crazy that the government told a

company that some of its own staff are no longer allowed to use the product they built. That means guys like Andre Karpathy, who just recently got the

job at Anthropic, it can't even use Fable. In response to that directive, they decided to hit the big red button and yanked Fable and Mythos for

everybody. And now everybody's been quietly demoted back to Opus 4.8. And this is the first time in

history a major AI company has pulled a live public model off the shelf because the federal government said so. Many developers out there are not too

happy with Anthropic right now. Because on top of this whole situation, there was already backlash over reports that Anthropic was intentionally

degrading Mythos and Fable Performance on certain AI research jobs without making it obvious to users.

But others out there are speculating that this whole thing was a calculated publicity stunt to continue pumping up Anthropic's preipo numbers while

simultaneously building a regulatory moat around it. But I think the only thing that can truly stop Anthropic at this point is a better model from a

competitor. A leaked benchmark shows that Mistl might have that model, but we're also awaiting new

releases from Open AI and Google. Most of what we hear about AI is either non-stop hype from big tech or AI doomers warning us that the saw apocalypse

will destroy the human race. But if you want to actually understand AI issues, you should check out Blue Dot. Impact, the sponsor of today's video.

They're a nonprofit whose mission is to get more people involved in making AI go better for humanity.

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DeepMind, Stanford HAI, and Apollo Research to try out their future of AI course at the link below. This has been the code report. Thanks for watching

and I will see you in the next one.