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Anthropic Launches AI Cybersecurity Initiative With Big Tech Partners

Anthropic has unveiled a new cybersecurity initiative, “Project Glasswing,” in collaboration with major technology firms including Amazon, Microsoft and Apple.

The program provides selected partners with early access to an advanced AI model, “Claude Mythos Preview,” designed for defensive cybersecurity applications. Additional collaborators include CrowdStrike, Palo Alto Networks, Google and Nvidia.

Anthropic stated that the model has already identified thousands of critical vulnerabilities across operating systems, browsers and other software, demonstrating its potential as a tool for proactive threat detection and mitigation.

The initiative emerges amid growing concerns over AI-driven cyberattacks. Industry discussions, including those at recent cybersecurity conferences, have increasingly focused on whether traditional security tools can keep pace with AI-enabled threats.

Under Project Glasswing, partner organizations will deploy the model in controlled environments to strengthen defensive capabilities. Anthropic also plans to share findings across the industry to improve overall cybersecurity resilience.

The company is extending access to around 40 additional organizations responsible for critical infrastructure and has committed up to $100 million in usage credits, along with $4 million in funding for open-source security initiatives.

Anthropic confirmed ongoing discussions with U.S. government agencies regarding the model’s capabilities and risk profile, reflecting heightened regulatory and national security interest in advanced AI systems.

The move underscores a broader industry shift: as AI becomes both a tool for attackers and defenders, leading technology firms are increasingly collaborating to build collective cybersecurity defenses.

Big Tech’s Quarter in Four Charts: AI Spending and Cloud Growth

U.S. technology giants are sharply increasing spending as they double down on artificial intelligence, intensifying investor scrutiny over whether returns can justify lofty valuations. Companies including Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta Platforms are expected to pour more than $630 billion into AI-related investments this year, even as profitability gains lag the pace of outlays.

Capital spending highlights the scale of the push. Amazon is leading with plans for roughly $200 billion, followed by Alphabet at up to $185 billion and Meta at as much as $135 billion. Analysts warn that markets are increasingly unforgiving of heavy investment without clear signals of returns on invested capital.

Cloud performance shows divergent momentum. Google Cloud delivered the fastest growth in the December quarter, rising 48%, buoyed by adoption of its Gemini AI model. Amazon Web Services posted 24% growth, while Microsoft Azure grew 39%.

Profit trends were uneven as higher costs weighed on Amazon and Meta, while Microsoft reported its strongest profit growth in two years. Market capitalization reflected shifting sentiment: optimism around Gemini and partnerships tied to Apple’s Siri refresh helped Alphabet’s shares outperform peers in recent months. Together, the charts underscore a sector betting big on AI—while investors wait for clearer proof of payoff.

Apple Ads and Apple Maps not designated under EU Digital Markets Act

The European Commission said on Thursday that Apple’s advertising and mapping services will not be designated as gatekeepers under the European Union’s Digital Markets Act, citing their relatively low usage and limited market impact across Europe.

In a statement, the Commission said it had concluded that Apple does not meet the criteria for gatekeeper status in relation to Apple Ads and Apple Maps. Regulators said neither service acts as an important gateway for business users seeking to reach end users in the European market.

“These platform services do not constitute an important gateway for business users to reach end users,” the Commission said, explaining that the DMA designation is reserved for services with significant scale, entrenched market positions and a strong ability to influence competition.

Apple welcomed the decision, saying its services face robust competition in Europe. “These services face significant competition in Europe, and we’re pleased the Commission recognized they do not meet the criteria for designation under the Digital Markets Act,” the company said in a statement.

The DMA is one of the world’s most far-reaching regulatory frameworks aimed at curbing the market power of major technology companies. It imposes strict obligations on so-called gatekeepers to prevent anti-competitive practices and to make it easier for users and businesses to switch between rival services, including social networks, web browsers and app stores.

Apple is already subject to DMA obligations for other parts of its ecosystem, including its App Store and mobile operating system. Thursday’s decision narrows the scope of additional regulatory requirements the company will face in Europe, at a time when Big Tech firms remain under intense scrutiny from EU competition authorities.