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  3. I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos.

I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos.

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  • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

    I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos. I’ve read the research paper they released and the numbers, and basically I agree with @malwaretech’s take. It’s marketing. The cybersecurity industry is historically very good at marketing cyber pearl harbour and the need to buy magic boxes.

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    sandorspruit@mastodon.nlS This user is from outside of this forum
    sandorspruit@mastodon.nlS This user is from outside of this forum
    sandorspruit@mastodon.nl
    wrote last edited by
    #7

    @GossiTheDog @malwaretech @steltenpower Well, well, well. Our old friends Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt 😏

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

      Companion video https://youtu.be/fM7GIIylXqI

      gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
      gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
      gossithedog@cyberplace.social
      wrote last edited by
      #8

      I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

      The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

      So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

      The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

      gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG wall_e@ioc.exchangeW mikesiegel@infosec.exchangeM simonzerafa@infosec.exchangeS david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD 8 Replies Last reply
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      • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

        I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

        The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

        So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

        The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

        gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
        gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
        gossithedog@cyberplace.social
        wrote last edited by
        #9

        Anthropic set the project across open source projects and provided access and reported the vulns. Typically, you'd expect to see NCSCs spinning up advisories to patch high impact vulns, CISA telling orgs to patch etc etc etc.

        What's actually happening is... uhm... a whole heap of nothing but people copy and pasting marketing about how cybersecurity is over.

        It's not though, is it?

        agowa338@chaos.socialA bontchev@infosec.exchangeB T marius@kiessling.socialM nyanbinary@infosec.exchangeN 6 Replies Last reply
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        • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

          Anthropic set the project across open source projects and provided access and reported the vulns. Typically, you'd expect to see NCSCs spinning up advisories to patch high impact vulns, CISA telling orgs to patch etc etc etc.

          What's actually happening is... uhm... a whole heap of nothing but people copy and pasting marketing about how cybersecurity is over.

          It's not though, is it?

          agowa338@chaos.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
          agowa338@chaos.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
          agowa338@chaos.social
          wrote last edited by
          #10

          @GossiTheDog

          Well cybersecurity is over but not because of this but because of everyone and their mother deploying openclaw in production...

          cure53@infosec.exchangeC drwho@masto.hackers.townD 2 Replies Last reply
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          • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

            I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

            The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

            So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

            The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

            wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
            wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
            wall_e@ioc.exchange
            wrote last edited by
            #11

            @GossiTheDog from a practical perspective what worries me more is time to poc/working exploit for known vulns.

            OSS library releases patch, model looks at diff + cve description and drops a working exploit for a couple of hundred $ of compute.

            Most companies (at least this side of the pond) are not currently equipped to deal with continuously applying patches for 1-day vulns in prod.
            Many large orgs here are proud that they've managed to get on a monthly update cycle

            wall_e@ioc.exchangeW 1 Reply Last reply
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            • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

              I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos. I’ve read the research paper they released and the numbers, and basically I agree with @malwaretech’s take. It’s marketing. The cybersecurity industry is historically very good at marketing cyber pearl harbour and the need to buy magic boxes.

              Link Preview Image
              pyrogenesis@mefi.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
              pyrogenesis@mefi.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
              pyrogenesis@mefi.social
              wrote last edited by
              #12

              @GossiTheDog @malwaretech The number of people who should know better just going "*this time* the PR blather is true, I just know it!" is pretty cringe.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                Anthropic set the project across open source projects and provided access and reported the vulns. Typically, you'd expect to see NCSCs spinning up advisories to patch high impact vulns, CISA telling orgs to patch etc etc etc.

                What's actually happening is... uhm... a whole heap of nothing but people copy and pasting marketing about how cybersecurity is over.

                It's not though, is it?

                bontchev@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
                bontchev@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
                bontchev@infosec.exchange
                wrote last edited by
                #13

                @GossiTheDog Haven't we already been there with fuzzing?

                Anyway, even if Mythos is as good as they claim, that's not really a problem as long as it is available only to a few. It's when every script kiddie gets access to it that we should start worrying.

                cure53@infosec.exchangeC L 2 Replies Last reply
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                • wall_e@ioc.exchangeW wall_e@ioc.exchange

                  @GossiTheDog from a practical perspective what worries me more is time to poc/working exploit for known vulns.

                  OSS library releases patch, model looks at diff + cve description and drops a working exploit for a couple of hundred $ of compute.

                  Most companies (at least this side of the pond) are not currently equipped to deal with continuously applying patches for 1-day vulns in prod.
                  Many large orgs here are proud that they've managed to get on a monthly update cycle

                  wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
                  wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
                  wall_e@ioc.exchange
                  wrote last edited by
                  #14

                  @GossiTheDog to be fair, the current time to poc is in many cases already down ≤ 1 day or so, but this could take some of the skill out of it and make it more broadly available

                  wall_e@ioc.exchangeW 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • agowa338@chaos.socialA agowa338@chaos.social

                    @GossiTheDog

                    Well cybersecurity is over but not because of this but because of everyone and their mother deploying openclaw in production...

                    cure53@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cure53@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cure53@infosec.exchange
                    wrote last edited by
                    #15

                    @agowa338 Cyber security is an insanely complex beast with some parts being technical, some being human, some being regulatory, etc., and well, finding bugs is one small component.

                    Emphasis on small.

                    We have not really been great at cyber security in the past, and improvements are needed all across the board. We won't be great at it tomorrow because magic.

                    Having one component potentially improve is, especially given how speculative the current situation is, is nothing to really worry about. Rather the contrary.

                    Time will tell, some processes might change, and that is likely all that will happen for a long time.

                    Most humans in cyber security will very likely notice very little impact for now. Can this all go sideways? Yes, of course. Is it time to say that cyber security is over? I don't think so. At all.

                    agowa338@chaos.socialA 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • wall_e@ioc.exchangeW wall_e@ioc.exchange

                      @GossiTheDog to be fair, the current time to poc is in many cases already down ≤ 1 day or so, but this could take some of the skill out of it and make it more broadly available

                      wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
                      wall_e@ioc.exchangeW This user is from outside of this forum
                      wall_e@ioc.exchange
                      wrote last edited by
                      #16

                      @GossiTheDog but other than that... yeah hype-marketing playbook 101.

                      Didn't OpenAI pull the:"oh no it's too powerful, humanity couldn't take it yet so we're not releasing it to the public", stunt with one of their earlier models as well?^^

                      drwho@masto.hackers.townD 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • cure53@infosec.exchangeC cure53@infosec.exchange

                        @agowa338 Cyber security is an insanely complex beast with some parts being technical, some being human, some being regulatory, etc., and well, finding bugs is one small component.

                        Emphasis on small.

                        We have not really been great at cyber security in the past, and improvements are needed all across the board. We won't be great at it tomorrow because magic.

                        Having one component potentially improve is, especially given how speculative the current situation is, is nothing to really worry about. Rather the contrary.

                        Time will tell, some processes might change, and that is likely all that will happen for a long time.

                        Most humans in cyber security will very likely notice very little impact for now. Can this all go sideways? Yes, of course. Is it time to say that cyber security is over? I don't think so. At all.

                        agowa338@chaos.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                        agowa338@chaos.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                        agowa338@chaos.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #17

                        @cure53

                        I know. I've been done that. I was the only technician that talked to the compliance people so I "earned" all of the work involved in communicating and bridging both worlds.

                        And since then it just got worse. Nobody cares about it security. The compliance people are just writing some shit and at this point in many companies they don't even expect their technicians to actually implement it anymore either (if it is even possible at all).

                        It's just a work creation measure at this point…

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • bontchev@infosec.exchangeB bontchev@infosec.exchange

                          @GossiTheDog Haven't we already been there with fuzzing?

                          Anyway, even if Mythos is as good as they claim, that's not really a problem as long as it is available only to a few. It's when every script kiddie gets access to it that we should start worrying.

                          cure53@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                          cure53@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                          cure53@infosec.exchange
                          wrote last edited by
                          #18

                          @bontchev @GossiTheDog Agreed. Current recommendation from our end:

                          Keep calm, find and fix bugs, make the world a bit safer one bug at a time...

                          And ignore the hype train, but keep an open eye on how real and measurable things develop. Just what we did before.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                            I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

                            The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

                            So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

                            The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

                            mikesiegel@infosec.exchangeM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mikesiegel@infosec.exchangeM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mikesiegel@infosec.exchange
                            wrote last edited by
                            #19

                            @GossiTheDog he makes a good point about the subsidized cost. It's like in the early days when Uber was cheap AF to put the taxis out of business. Once they had market share, they cost as much as taxis.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                              Anthropic set the project across open source projects and provided access and reported the vulns. Typically, you'd expect to see NCSCs spinning up advisories to patch high impact vulns, CISA telling orgs to patch etc etc etc.

                              What's actually happening is... uhm... a whole heap of nothing but people copy and pasting marketing about how cybersecurity is over.

                              It's not though, is it?

                              T This user is from outside of this forum
                              T This user is from outside of this forum
                              trademark@fosstodon.org
                              wrote last edited by
                              #20

                              @GossiTheDog They aren't claiming it's over, that's a strawman. But interestingly they are providing commit hashes of things they've found. Some of these are seriously scary. I've saved a copy of the webpage and will be waiting to see if the promised commits turn up. If they do check out my opinion of Anthropic will rise. If not...

                              dalias@hachyderm.ioD 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

                                The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

                                So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

                                The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

                                simonzerafa@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                simonzerafa@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                simonzerafa@infosec.exchange
                                wrote last edited by
                                #21

                                @GossiTheDog

                                Yes, we do watch videos! 🤔

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                  I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

                                  The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

                                  So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

                                  The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

                                  david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                                  david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #22

                                  @GossiTheDog

                                  I asked the FreeBSD security officer to compare the (not yet public) one to Coverity reports. Apparently it found something that Coverity didn't, which means at least it isn't just regurgitating static analyser reports.

                                  That said, last time I read the Coverity reports, they found tens of thousands of possible issues (over 90% of the ones I triaged were false positives). You could probably get a higher RoI from paying someone $20K to triage Coverity scan reports.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                    I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos. I’ve read the research paper they released and the numbers, and basically I agree with @malwaretech’s take. It’s marketing. The cybersecurity industry is historically very good at marketing cyber pearl harbour and the need to buy magic boxes.

                                    Link Preview Image
                                    codinghorror@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    codinghorror@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    codinghorror@infosec.exchange
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #23

                                    @GossiTheDog @malwaretech Agree, and I will only add one thing: Misanthropic is an amoral cult.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                      I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos. I’ve read the research paper they released and the numbers, and basically I agree with @malwaretech’s take. It’s marketing. The cybersecurity industry is historically very good at marketing cyber pearl harbour and the need to buy magic boxes.

                                      Link Preview Image
                                      cresssalad@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                      cresssalad@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                      cresssalad@mastodon.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #24

                                      @GossiTheDog @malwaretech

                                      Yeah and solutions like this dont put servers in datacenters or work with threat analysis on transit traffic.

                                      If all its doing is improving point software solutions, then thats a good thing. Its not going to finish off SAAS solutions - its going to improve them.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                        I don't think anybody actually watches videos any more, so here's MWT's core point -

                                        The flagship and lead vuln in the research is a BSD vuln, it cost $20k to discover with Mythos. Anthropic only reached a crash, and the vuln class in 99%+ cases never reaches RCE, just crashes.

                                        So.. cool.. you spent $20k of VC money to find a crash as the flagship vuln. But... uhm... that isn't the end of the world.

                                        The proof is going to be if any of the open source vulns turn out to be important. So far:

                                        sikorsky78@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        sikorsky78@infosec.exchangeS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        sikorsky78@infosec.exchange
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #25

                                        @GossiTheDog Thanks for the summary, ain't got time for viewing videos.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • gossithedog@cyberplace.socialG gossithedog@cyberplace.social

                                          I’ve had a bunch of people ask my thoughts on Anthropic’s Mythos. I’ve read the research paper they released and the numbers, and basically I agree with @malwaretech’s take. It’s marketing. The cybersecurity industry is historically very good at marketing cyber pearl harbour and the need to buy magic boxes.

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          evoscale@c.imE This user is from outside of this forum
                                          evoscale@c.imE This user is from outside of this forum
                                          evoscale@c.im
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #26

                                          @GossiTheDog @malwaretech Be wary of projecting special interests, couched in pure Capitalist profiting, too far among a valuable sector like CyberSec. It's a common pattern for a narrowing margin of the masses, to control more vital infrastructure, and heap residual abuses (thanks Capitalism) upon the far more innocent.

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