Opinion
Guest
Essay
It’s the
End of the Internet as We Know ItApril 15, 2026
By Raffi
Krikorian
Mr.
Krikorian is the chief technology officer at Mozilla.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/opinion/mythos-open-souce-internet.html
Last
week, Anthropic announced that its newest artificial intelligence model, Claude
Mythos Preview, would not be released to the public, after the company learned
it was capable of finding and exploiting vulnerabilities that have gone
undetected in critical software systems for decades. Instead, Anthropic gave
access to Mythos — and $100 million in credits to use it — to more than 50 of
the world’s largest organizations, including Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Google
and JPMorgan Chase, as part of a defensive cybersecurity initiative called
Project Glasswing.
Even
before the announcement, publicly available A.I. models were already finding
security vulnerabilities in commonly used software. Anthropic’s researchers
acknowledged that other labs are six to 18 months from building something
comparable. These capabilities, and the threats they pose to cybersecurity,
will proliferate. From streaming platforms to online banking services to search
engines that answer everyday questions, broad swaths of the internet could
become unusable.
If we
don’t respond carefully and decisively, then the millions of people who stand
to gain the most from A.I.’s progress as a programming tool will also be the
ones most exposed to attack. Leaving them to fend for themselves could erode
the internet as we know it.
You might
already be familiar with the concept of vibe coding: using A.I. tools to turn
plain-language descriptions into working software. A shop owner describes the
inventory system she needs, and A.I. creates it. A dentist describes a patient
portal, and A.I. delivers it. Millions of people who never thought of
themselves as software developers — small business owners, clinicians,
nonprofit directors — are creating software for the first time without any
training. But these applications are often written without security review.
Potential flaws, increasingly easy to find as A.I. improves, could let someone
access customer data, take over accounts or shut the entire application down.
For
decades, two kinds of scarcity kept the internet safe — or safe enough. Writing
software was hard, so the people who did it were trained, careful and few.
Finding bugs was also hard, so the worst flaws stayed hidden, sometimes for
decades. It wasn’t a great system. But the difficulty on both sides created a
kind of détente that held.
Now,
thanks to new A.I. tools, anyone can write code. Soon, bad actors could use
those same tools to find out what’s wrong with code. The détente is over.
Most of
the internet was built from open-source software. For example, much of the
video you stream online is quietly delivered by FFmpeg, a free, open-source
program maintained by volunteers whose combined budget is modest by any
corporate standard. OpenBSD, an operating system that runs the firewalls and
gateways protecting sensitive networks from outside attack, and which Anthropic
calls “one of the most security-hardened operating systems in the world,” runs
on donations. Unlike the proprietary software developed by the big firms in
Project Glasswing, these projects exist because someone decided the work
mattered more than the paycheck. They are built by people who have given years
of their lives to code that powers products most of us use every day without
knowing it.
According
to Anthropic, Mythos found a 27-year-old vulnerability in OpenBSD and a
16-year-old vulnerability in FFmpeg, buried in a line of code that, Anthropic
says, other automated security tools had glossed over five million times. (Both
organizations say they have fixed the issues identified.) Even Firefox, the web
browser my own organization builds, wasn’t spared: When Anthropic ran its
previous model against Firefox, it was able to weaponize an already discovered
bug just twice out of several hundred attempts. When Anthropic ran Mythos, it
succeeded nearly every time. Across all these projects and many more, the model
identified thousands of vulnerabilities in code. These are the types of issues
that can allow ransomware to shut down hospitals. They’re how cyberattacks can
disrupt critical infrastructure. And they’re how foreign intelligence services
can compromise government networks.
Beyond
detecting problems in lines of code, Mythos found the seams in the informal
social contract that holds the internet together. It’s long been understood
that developers would share their work openly, help one another fix what’s
broken and maintain the software that all of us depend on — not for pay, but
because that’s how the community has worked. The veteran programmer who has
been patching critical code for 20 years in his spare time is in the same
position as the shop owner who vibe coded her first app last Tuesday. Both are
exposed. Neither has a security team. Neither currently has access to Mythos.
To its
credit, Anthropic is among the first major A.I. companies to decide the
responsible thing was to slow down. The company says it is committing $4
million to open-source security organizations. That’s more than anyone else in
this industry has done.
And yet
the underlying economics haven’t changed; the most valuable software
infrastructure in the world continues to be maintained by people working for
free, while the companies building fortunes on top of it never had to pay for
its upkeep. Now a powerful new capability has arrived — and as we’ve seen
repeatedly in tech, there’s the risk that organizations with resources will
receive it first and learn to protect themselves, while others are left
vulnerable.
The
programmer who gave 20 years of his life to maintain code that runs inside
products used by billions of people? He doesn’t have access to Mythos yet. He
should. The organizations that steward open-source infrastructure know who
these maintainers are and how to reach them, and are ready to help. That’s a
short list and a solvable problem. The shop owner is different. She shouldn’t
need Mythos or a tool just as powerful to defend herself from a cyberattack,
just the confidence that the tools she used were built to protect her from the
start.
So, let’s
change the default. Every company that ships open-source code in its products —
which is most of the technology industry — should invest in the essential
workers who maintain it. That means funding, but it also means that A.I. firms
contribute engineering time, security expertise and staff to the projects we
all depend on. A.I. companies that are building tools like Mythos, beyond
Anthropic, should put them into the hands of these workers. And all of us who
benefit from open-source infrastructure need to treat it as what it has always
been: as critical as any road, bridge or power line.
And for
the millions of new creators building software for the first time, we need to
make it easy for them to build safely. Integrate security into the tools
they’re already using. Make sure the A.I. that writes the code also protects
the code. Not as an add-on and not as a premium feature, but as a default. The
détente is over. The flaws are visible. The creators are everywhere. The only
question is whether we protect all of them — or just the ones who can afford to
protect themselves.


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