My original post refers to how Anthropic advertised Mythos. It’s “too dangerous to be available to the general public,”
To me it totally looks like a desperate publicity stunt, due to this thing called "competition".
If it's too good to be true, then it probably isn't. "Mythos", like newer models in general, is probably just a small but not insignificant step forward, but that's about it. (It
could be a total flop as well, but that's unlikely, too.)
They might feel sorry they didn't come up with this stunt before. I mean, the big shift Greg KH and others saw in early 2026 is exactly because AI models and tooling got better; not just at Anthropic but others as well. They could as well played the same card with Opus 4.5, or Google or OpenAI could have played this card. At any point in time during the last year. None of the models got like 100x better overnight, but at some point small gradual improvements hit the point where the consequences become visible, of course enabling "dangerous use" too.
The downside of this stunt is that now expectations are so high, that actual performance will be underwhelming even if it was a significant step forward. They are probably counting on the fact that their paying customers (and sensible developers) saw through their marketing and understand what to really expect, while politicians, tech bloggers and other unnecessary oxygen users who generated good lift for them already forgot about it and moved to the next big thing. This might end up being a good marketing strategy after all. It's a trick I don't like, but this is how the world of marketing unfortunately works.