India has been included among a select group of countries granted access to Claude Mythos Preview, a specialized artificial intelligence model developed by U.S.-based company Anthropic for advanced cybersecurity applications. The model is part of the company’s broader initiative aimed at strengthening digital security across critical infrastructure systems worldwide.
Access to the model is being provided through Project Glasswing, Anthropic’s dedicated cybersecurity program. The initiative currently involves around 150 organizations across more than 15 countries and is focused on entities that operate essential infrastructure or provide services used by large populations. India joins a group that also includes countries such as France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand.
Claude Mythos Preview is designed for high-level cybersecurity research, including code analysis and the identification of software vulnerabilities. According to Anthropic, the model is capable of examining large and complex codebases and detecting security flaws that might otherwise remain unnoticed using conventional methods.
The company has kept the model restricted and has not made it available to the public. Instead, access is limited to carefully selected partners under Project Glasswing, which was launched in April 2026. The program initially included around 50 organizations, such as technology companies, cybersecurity firms, financial institutions, and open-source contributors. The latest expansion represents the first significant extension of the initiative beyond the United States and the United Kingdom.
Anthropic stated that participating organizations share a high-risk profile due to the sensitivity of the systems they manage. The company noted that a successful cyberattack on these systems could have widespread consequences, potentially affecting millions of people and creating serious implications for both national and global security.
In its official communication, Anthropic explained that many of the participating organizations manage infrastructure where a major security breach could impact more than 100 million users. This highlights the critical importance of proactive vulnerability detection and advanced AI-assisted cybersecurity tools.
According to the company, organizations involved in Project Glasswing have already identified more than 10,000 high-severity or critical software vulnerabilities using Claude Mythos Preview. These findings underline the growing role of artificial intelligence in strengthening cybersecurity defenses and preventing large-scale digital threats before they can be exploited.
With India now part of this exclusive group, the move signals increasing global collaboration in AI-driven cybersecurity and reflects the growing importance of advanced technology in protecting essential digital infrastructure.











