Anthropic's suspended Fable 5 model could return within weeks, traders are betting, even after talks with U.S. officials ended Monday without restoring access.
Senior Anthropic technical staff met with Commerce Department officials in Washington on Monday, the firm's most direct push yet to undo a June 12 directive, delivered on a Friday evening, that pulled the model offline. The order barred any foreign national from using Fable 5, so the company shut it down worldwide rather than try to screen users by citizenship. The day closed with no agreement.
Next steps remain unclear. Neither side offered a fresh timeline for a resolution.
The government still believes Fable 5 can be jailbroken to unlock the cybersecurity reach of its sibling system, Mythos 5. The company disputes that reading, arguing the weakness is narrow and common across rival models. It says other public AI tools can surface the same flaws.
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On Polymarket, traders price a 67% chance that access returns to U.S. customers by July 1, while Kalshi puts a comeback by July 10 near 74%. The contracts imply most expect a fix in days or weeks, not hours.
Scores of cybersecurity leaders have urged officials to reverse course, calling the model more useful to defenders than to attackers. Their letter drew signatures from security chiefs at major technology and infrastructure firms. Commerce officials, for their part, have suggested they would let the model return for consumer use once the flaw is resolved.
Restoration still hinges on two routes: the company could prove to regulators that the exploit is patched, or build a system that verifies each user's nationality. Either step would reopen access.
The fight did not begin this month. Relations ruptured earlier this year after the company refused to let the U.S. military use its models for surveillance and autonomous weapons, prompting the Pentagon to brand it a supply chain risk. Anthropic sued over that designation, calling it unlawful retaliation, and the case is still moving through the courts.
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