{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","provider_name":"Transistor","provider_url":"https://transistor.fm","author_name":"AI Security Ops","title":"Mythos and Fable Pulled | Episode 59","html":"<iframe width=\"100%\" height=\"180\" frameborder=\"no\" scrolling=\"no\" seamless src=\"https://share.transistor.fm/e/94b63fd6\"></iframe>","width":"100%","height":180,"duration":961,"description":"In this episode of BHIS Presents: AI Security Ops, the team tackles a first-of-its-kind moment in AI security and regulation:What happens when the U.S. government orders a company to pull its most powerful AI models off the market?Not the chips. Not the infrastructure. The models themselves.On June 12th, 2026, Anthropic disabled Fable-5 and Mythos-5 worldwide after receiving a federal export-control directive tied to foreign-national access. The models were only three days old, and the shutdown raises a much bigger question for security teams, builders, and defenders:Are frontier AI models now controlled technology?This episode breaks down the order, the export-control mechanism behind it, the cybersecurity concerns around jailbreaks, and what this means for anyone building security workflows on top of hosted AI models.We dig into:• Why Anthropic pulled Fable-5 and Mythos-5 for all customers• How foreign-national access rules forced an all-or-nothing shutdown• What EAR export controls are, and why ITAR keeps coming up• The history of encryption, PGP, and software as controlled technology• Why Fable-5 and Mythos-5 triggered cyberweapon concerns• The difference between guarded and less-guarded model releases• Why jailbreaks are central to the government’s justification• Why “all LLMs can be jailbroken” matters for policy and enforcement• Whether Anthropic’s safety messaging created regulatory risk• How competition and AI industry politics may shape regulation• Why model redundancy is becoming a security resilience requirement• What security teams should learn from a hosted model disappearing overnight• Why taking powerful AI away from defenders may make security worse, not betterThis episode explores a critical shift in AI security: frontier models are no longer just another SaaS dependency. They are becoming part of the security supply chain, subject to policy, export controls, national-security concerns, and sudden access loss.For security teams, the question is...","thumbnail_url":"https://img.transistorcdn.com/mN9_Xu9UJwoaajIvIvLd-Yygv-Vh_nJwEDItjPY09kA/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:400/h:400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS8zYjBm/MzE1MWI2YmE4ZGJh/MDQ3MmJkMTkxZGNl/MjBjNS5wbmc.webp","thumbnail_width":300,"thumbnail_height":300}