Mythos AI raises cybersecurity concerns among regulators and policymakersRollout to European banks may take days or weeks, sources familiar with the matter sayGerman central bank chief Joachim Nagel urges equal access to prevent misuse

NEW YORK/PARIS, April 21 (Reuters) – Anthropic plans to ‌provide access to its Mythos AI model to European banks soon, three people familiar with the matter said, as global banks scramble to test the technology after large U.S. banks were given initial access.

Mythos is viewed by cybersecurity experts as posing significant challenges ​to the banking industry and its legacy technology systems, prompting a series of warnings from regulators ​and policymakers gathered at last week’s International Monetary Fund spring meeting in Washington. A string ⁠of U.S. banks have so far been given access to Mythos – while the rest of the industry tries to ​catch up.

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“The challenge is that this technology is moving faster than most banks’ governance, operating models and control ​frameworks were designed to handle, widening the gap between risk discovery and remediation,” said Scott Keipper, EY Americas Financial Services Technology Consulting Leader.

“To respond, banks need to move beyond point‑in‑time cybersecurity fixes and adopt an enterprise‑wide approach that embeds AI into risk management ​across technology, operations, governance and oversight, not just cybersecurity.”

Anthropic aims to expand Mythos AI access to European and ​UK banks, among other organizations, one of the people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

That process involves checks to ensure the rollout ‌is ⁠done securely, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Another person said the access could be provided to European banks within days, while the first person said the rollout might take days or weeks. Bloomberg previously reported that Anthropic would release Mythos to UK financial institutions soon.

Anthropic did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Anthropic ​initially provided access to the ​model to partners in ⁠its Project Glasswing initiative and about 40 additional organisations that build or maintain critical software infrastructure.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N), opens new tab, which is part of Glasswing, was the only bank Anthropic ​has publicly said has access, although Bank of America (BAC.N), opens new tab has been part of Glasswing ​since the start ⁠and has been testing the Mythos technology internally, according to a source familiar with the matter.Other U.S. banks have more recently said they have been given access to Mythos, as regulators rush to examine the cybersecurity risks the new ⁠artificial intelligence ​model raises.German central bank chief Joachim Nagel called on Tuesday for ​all institutions to have access to Anthropic’s artificial intelligence model Mythos to keep the playing field even and to avoid it being misused.

Reporting ​by Saeed Azhar, Jeffrey Dastin and Mathieu Rosemain in Paris; editing by Megan Davies, Franklin Paul and Nick Zieminski

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Purchase Licensing RightsSaeed Azhar

Saeed Azhar is a Reuters financial journalist and part of the U.S. banking team, which covers Wall Street’s biggest banks. He focuses on Goldman Sachs and Bank of America, and also writes about regional banks. Before moving to New York in July 2022, he led the finance team in the Middle East from Dubai, and also worked in Singapore, covering Southeast Asia finance.

Jeffrey Dastin

Jeffrey Dastin is a correspondent for Reuters based in San Francisco, where he reports on the technology industry and artificial intelligence. He joined Reuters in 2014, originally writing about airlines and travel from the New York bureau. Dastin graduated from Yale University with a degree in history.
He was part of a team that examined lobbying by Amazon.com around the world, for which he won a SOPA Award in 2022.

Mathieu Rosemain

Mathieu is part of Reuters’ finance team, covering French banks and major M&A stories in the country and in Europe. A graduate of Sciences Po university, Mathieu previously covered the Tech beat at Reuters, following stints at Bloomberg News and French business daily Les Echos.