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Cybersecurity Executives Urge the Trump Administration to Ease Restrictions on Anthropic AI Models

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A group of cybersecurity executives and experts is asking the Trump administration to lift its directive preventing the use of Anthropic’s latest artificial intelligence models by foreign nationals. The post Cybersecurity Executives Urge the Trump Administration to Ease Restrictions on Anthropic AI Models appeared first on SecurityWeek .

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    A group of cybersecurity executives and experts is asking the Trump administration to lift its directive preventing the use of Anthropic’s latest artificial intelligence models by foreign nationals, saying the move could help U.S. adversaries more than it hurts them. Anthropic said Friday it has taken its latest artificial intelligence models, known as Fable 5 and Mythos 5, offline to comply with the directive. The AI giant said it did not believe the steps taken by the government were warranted by the concern it flagged about a potential security issue. Anthropic has said it was limiting use of some its latest technology to select customers because of its ability to surpass human cybersecurity experts in finding and exploiting computer vulnerabilities. The San Francisco-based company has had discussions with the White House previously about the latest models’ capabilities. In the letter Sunday, more than 100 cybersecurity experts and leaders from companies including Adobe and Nvidia asked the U.S. government to lift the export control directives on the Anthropic models and “commit to an open, scientific and transparent process of handling AI risk assessments in the future.” The letter said that while Anthropic’s Mythos models are “quite good” at finding flaws in software and weaponizing exploits, they are ”not uniquely good at these tasks” and many of the letter’s signatories regularly use other foundation and open-source models for security audits and training. The letter said it is dangerous to take away the best cyber defense capabilities “without a good reason” when America’s adversaries are rapidly advancing. China’s models, the letter said, are “only months behind the best American models,” and it is even likely that China’s government has access to private capabilities beyond what’s been made public. The export controls marked the U.S. government’s most significant step yet to restrict access to the most advanced AI models. Anthropic released Fable widely last week. That model is a limited version of the more advanced Mythos, to which the company has tightly limited access due to cybersecurity fears. The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday. Friday’s directive came 10 days after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to establish a framework for the federal government to vet the national security risks of the most advanced AI systems for up to a month before their public release. Participation by AI developers would be voluntary, the order said. Tensions have been running high between the Trump administration and the safety-conscious Anthropic, which has sought to put guardrails on the development of AI to minimize any potential risks and maximize its economic and national security benefits for the U.S. After a contract dispute with the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth sought to declare Anthropic a supply chain risk, an unprecedented move against a U.S. company that Anthropic has challenged in two federal courts. The company said it wanted assurance the Pentagon would not use its technology in fully autonomous weapons and the surveillance of Americans. Hegseth said the company must allow for any uses the Pentagon deemed lawful. Related: Anthropic Disputes Fable 5 AI Jailbreak Related: After AI Reaches Production: 12 Ways Security Teams Can Take Control WRITTEN BY Associated Press More from Associated Press Anthropic Says It Has Taken Its Latest AI Models Offline to Comply With New Export Controls FBI Seizes 13 Websites That Officials Say Were Used by China to Target and Recruit US Workers Anthropic Urges Industry Coordination to Allow for a ‘Pause’ in AI Development if Risks Grow Trump Signs Executive Order That Invites Vetting of Top AI Models for National Security Risks As the Pentagon Pushes for Battlefield AI, Some Military Leaders Urge Caution Russian Spies Are Aggressively Seeking Western Technology as Sanctions Bite, Officials Say California Sues 23andMe, Alleging It Failed to Protect User Data in 2023 Breach UK Cyberspying Chief Calls AI ‘an Unstoppable Force’ and Warns About Russia Latest News Can CISOs Trust Their Applications? TrustCloud Wants to Replace the Questionnaire Cal Water Investigating Iranian Hackers’ Claims White House Issues Memo to Bolster NSS Cybersecurity Atomic Arch Supply Chain Attack Hits 1,500 AUR Packages Tech Coalition ‘Athena’ Targets OSS Vulnerabilities Ahead of Disclosure Cisco Patches Another SD-WAN Zero-Day Exploited in Attacks Ransomware Attack Shuts Down Mills of Australia’s Second-Largest Sugar Producer Chinese Hackers Target Medical, Military, and AI Research in North America Trending Webinar: How Modern Breaches Bypass MFA And Evade Detection June 17, 2026 Today’s attackers are no longer breaking in — they’re logging in. Join this live webinar as we break down the modern identity attack chain and examine how recent breaches exploited weaknesses in authentication, identity verification, and access management processes. Register Webinar: Modern Exposure Validation In The AI Era June 24, 2026 AI has accelerated both sides of the fight. Adversaries are weaponizing vulnerabilities faster, while defenders are racing to ship detections and configurations. Join this live webinar as we explore how to prove your controls actually hold against new threats, map your security maturity, and unite breach simulation with automated pentesting into a single, coordinated program. Register People on the Move Stephen Garcia has been named Chief Information Security Officer at BreachRx. Kasper Lindgaard has been appointed Vice President of Security Strategy at CoreView. Chaim Mazal has been named Chief Information Security Officer at GitLab. More People On The Move Expert Insights After AI Reaches Production: 12 Ways Security Teams Can Take Control Security teams need more than visibility into AI applications, they need a repeatable framework for monitoring, investigating, and defending them in production. (Joshua Goldfarb) Everybody Is Vibe Coding But Nobody Told The Security Team AI-driven development is not something organizations can or should block. But it must be governed. (Danelle Au) The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor And The End Of Responsible Disclosure AI can help attackers generate malware, create malicious payloads, bypass simple security checks, and convert vague malicious intent into functional code. (Etay Maor) Raising The Cybersecurity Stakes: Ante Up For The Agentic Era CISOs are now facing machine-speed attacks and asking, “How do I agent?” The industry must provide remediation at scale. (Nadir Izrael) Caught Off Guard: Securing AI After It Hits Production As enterprises rush AI projects into production, security teams are increasingly being forced into reactive mode. (Joshua Goldfarb) Flipboard Reddit Whatsapp Email
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    Security Week
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    ◇ Industry News & Leadership
    Published
    Jun 16, 2026
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    Jun 16, 2026
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