Mozilla recently announced that early access to Anthropic’s restricted Mythos Preview model enabled developers to identify 271 security vulnerabilities in the unreleased source code of its new Firefox 150 browser.
Previously, Anthropic had restricted this powerful artificial intelligence model to its key industry partners, citing substantial concerns about its remarkable ability to discover severe cybersecurity flaws.
The outstanding results of this recent software trial contribute to ongoing industry debates regarding whether this advanced system represents a scary new era of enhanced hacking or merely a routine upgrade in capabilities.
Mozilla’s Chief Technology Officer, Bobby Holley, stated that this remarkable milestone finally gives cybersecurity defenders a decisive advantage in the ongoing battle against malicious hackers.
To illustrate the significant leap in technical capability, Holley noted that Anthropic’s previous flagship model, Opus 4.6, detected only twenty-two security-sensitive bugs when analyzing Firefox 148 last month.
While elite human security researchers or automated fuzzing techniques could theoretically discover these same software flaws, Holley emphasized that using the Mythos model completely eliminates the need to dedicate many months of costly human effort just to find a single complex bug.
In a subsequent interview with Wired, Holley asserted that every piece of modern software will eventually have to engage in advanced artificial intelligence-based vulnerability analysis to uncover hidden bugs.
This aggressive defense strategy proves especially critical for foundational open-source projects that continuously rely on underfunded volunteer maintenance to remain completely secure. In a recent essay, Mozilla executive Raffi Krikorian argued that the extreme difficulty of finding software flaws has created a delicate balance in cyberthreat research.
He strongly urged the technology industry to provide dedicated open-source programmers with immediate, unrestricted access to advanced systems like Mythos to protect essential digital products used by billions of users worldwide.