TechCrunch — AI · · 4 min read

Cybersecurity researchers aren’t happy about the guardrails on Anthropic’s Fable

Mirrored from TechCrunch — AI for archival readability. Support the source by reading on the original site.

Anthropic released its latest model Fable on Tuesday, billing it as a public and limited version of its powerful and much-hyped cybersecurity model Mythos.

But not everyone is happy with the restrictions, and a number of cybersecurity researchers and professionals have aired complaints online. 

“[Fable] rejects any request that could be tangentially cyber related. Even innocuous tasks like reading a blog post,” said Valentina “Chompie” Palmiotti, a well-known security researcher who works at IBM X-Force. 

When a prompt triggers its guardrails, Fable pauses the chat and says that its “safety measures flagged this message for cybersecurity or biology topics.”

The guardrails were put in place to limit the risk that Fable could be used to develop malware or compromise software — a longstanding concern within Anthropic. The restrictions on biology come from a similar concern around developing biological weapons.

When the AI giant released Mythos in April, it restricted the model to a limited number of companies and organizations in what it called Project Glasswing, an effort to deploy the model to secure critical software and infrastructure. Last week, Anthropic expanded access to Mythos to hundreds of organizations in 15 countries. 

But despite the good intentions, many cybersecurity experts are still put off by the haphazard nature of the restrictions. Matt Suiche, a cybersecurity veteran, told TechCrunch that “if you ask it to write secure code, it assumes it is cybersecurity related work instead of software engineering best practices, and you get downgraded.” Fable is programmed to fall back to Claude Opus 4.8 if it hits a guardrail. “It seems to be keyword based, so anything in the lexical field of ‘cybersecurity’ triggers the guardrails.”

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“But it is understandable as we are still in the early days and they are still adapting their guardrails. I am sure they are going to evolve over time as Anthropic and other frontier model companies will collaborate more with the current new generation of cybersecurity companies,” said Suiche, who is a member of the technical staff at Tolmo, an AI cybersecurity startup. “It’s better to catch more people than not enough when you do such a release and to relax the guardrails over time.”

Another researcher griped on X that “even asking for a code review” triggers Fable’s guardrails. 

Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Apart from guardrails inside its models, Anthropic requires cybersecurity professionals to apply to the Cyber Verification Program. If they get approved, the applicants have fewer limitations on using Claude for cybersecurity work. OpenAI has a similar program called Trusted Access for Cyber.

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Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

Senior Reporter, Cybersecurity

Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai is a Senior Writer at TechCrunch, where he covers hacking, cybersecurity, surveillance, and privacy.

You can contact or verify outreach from Lorenzo by emailing [email protected], via encrypted message at +1 917 257 1382 on Signal, and @lorenzofb on Keybase/Telegram.

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