
UK Banks Locked Out of Anthropic's Mythos, and That Should Worry Us All
When the Bank of England governor admits British financial institutions can't access the best AI cybersecurity tools, it's time to pay attention.
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Zero. That's how many UK banks currently have access to Anthropic's Mythos, according to Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey. He said as much at a central banking conference in Iceland this week, and I'll be honest, that number stopped me cold.
Now, I spent my career in industrial robotics, not fintech. But I've been around long enough to know that when the guy running a nation's central bank publicly admits his institutions are locked out of critical security infrastructure, something's gone sideways.
The Cybersecurity Gap Nobody's Talking About
Bailey's comments, reported by Bloomberg, weren't buried in some technical appendix. He was speaking to Stephanie Flanders, on camera, calling for a multinational approach to fighting cybersecurity threats. The subtext was clear: the UK is falling behind, and going it alone isn't working.
Look, here's the thing. When I was at Kuka, we had similar problems with access to certain Siemens control systems in the early 2010s. Licensing restrictions, export controls, the usual headaches. But we were building car doors, not defending national financial infrastructure from state-sponsored hackers. The stakes here are, let's say, somewhat higher.
Bailey mentioned that British banks are using other models to test their cyberdefenses. That's like saying you're testing your fire suppression system with a garden hose because you can't get the industrial equipment. It works, sort of, until it doesn't.
Key points worth noting:
- Anthropic's Mythos is apparently the benchmark for AI-driven cybersecurity testing right now
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