The Trump administration lifted export restrictions on Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 after Anthropic committed to stronger safeguards, resolving a dispute over jailbreak vulnerabilities. Separately, Anthropic launched Claude Sonnet 5, a mid-tier agentic model priced at $2/$10 per million tokens through August 2026, and Claude Science, a unified research workbench for life sciences integrating PubMed, Jupyter, and HPC cluster access. The newsletter also covers Google's Nano Banana 2 Lite image model and Gemini Omni Flash video model, and Cognition's Devin Fusion multi-model routing system claiming 35% cost reduction versus GPT-5.5 and Opus 4.8.

Anthropic
The U.S. Department of Commerce has removed export control restrictions on two Anthropic models, Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5, according to an Anthropic tweet that gained significant traction on Hacker News. Export controls on AI models represent a significant regulatory mechanism affecting global deployment and access. The removal of these controls would expand the international availability of these models, with implications for Anthropic's global commercial reach and U.S. AI export policy.
Anthropic launched Claude Mythos 5, a restricted-access model capable of cracking previously secure software, and Claude Fable 5, a general-use version with novel safety classifiers that block or degrade responses on cybersecurity, biology, chemistry, and AI-development topics. Both models set new state-of-the-art results across software engineering, agentic coding, knowledge work, and scientific reasoning benchmarks, and are priced at roughly half the cost of the prior Claude Mythos Preview. Claude Fable 5 initially included undisclosed capability degradation for AI-development prompts — applied silently via prompt modification or steering vectors — which sparked controversy before Anthropic modified the policy. The release represents a significant escalation in both frontier capability and the operational complexity of safety-tiered model deployment.
Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 (a safety-guardrailed model) and Claude Mythos 5 (same underlying model with safeguards removed, for vetted cyberdefense/infrastructure users via Project Glasswing with US government collaboration), both priced at $10/$50 per million tokens. Apple released five new Apple Foundation Models (AFM 3) spanning on-device and cloud tiers, built with Google and Nvidia infrastructure. Additional headlines cover Google's Gemini 3.5 Live Translate (70+ languages, real-time), OpenAI's confidential SEC IPO filing, a NotebookLM upgrade to Gemini 3.5, and Cognition's FrontierCode benchmark for code-quality evaluation where Claude Opus 4.8 leads at 34.3%.
Anthropic is restoring global access to Claude Fable 5 starting July 1, 2026, after US export controls imposed on June 12 were lifted on June 30. The controls were triggered by an Amazon research report showing a jailbreak that allowed Fable 5 to identify software vulnerabilities and produce exploit code, though Anthropic's own testing confirmed comparable models (including Claude Opus 4.8, GPT-5.5, and Kimi K2.7) could produce the same outputs. Anthropic has deployed an improved safety classifier blocking the reported technique in over 99% of cases, and is co-developing a shared industry jailbreak severity framework with Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and other Glasswing partners. Access to the higher-capability Claude Mythos 5 remains restricted to approved US organizations under the Glasswing program.
Anthropic released Claude Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5, two variants of the same frontier model that set new state-of-the-art results across software engineering, knowledge work, cybersecurity, and agentic coding benchmarks. Claude Fable 5 is the general-availability version with safety classifiers that restrict responses on security, biology, chemistry, and cutting-edge AI topics, priced at $10/$50 per million input/output tokens; Mythos 5 is restricted to selected partners via Project Glasswing. Separately, Andrew Ng and collaborators released OpenCoworker, a free open-source desktop agent harness built on top of aisuite, designed to give users privacy-preserving agentic workflows with their own API keys or local models. The newsletter also contextualizes the broader shift toward LLM-driven agent harnesses as frontier models have become capable enough to reliably drive next-action decisions.
Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.8 with improvements in coding, reasoning, agentic tasks, and notably better uncertainty flagging—approximately four times less likely than Opus 4.7 to let code flaws pass uncommented. Alongside the model, Anthropic introduced dynamic workflows in Claude Code enabling tens to hundreds of parallel subagents for large-scale engineering tasks, an effort-control slider, and a 3x price cut on fast mode. Anthropic also previewed Mythos-class models, positioned above Opus in capability, currently available to a limited set of organizations for cybersecurity work pending broader safety clearance. The same digest covers MiniMax M3 (open-weights, ~60% SWE-Bench Pro), Nvidia's RTX Spark superchip, Cosmos 3 world model, and a GR00T/Unitree robotics partnership.
Anthropic announced three major developments: an upgraded Claude 3.5 Sonnet with significant coding improvements (SWE-bench Verified rising from 33.4% to 49.0%, surpassing all publicly available models including reasoning models), a new Claude 3.5 Haiku that matches Claude 3 Opus performance at Haiku-tier speed, and a public beta of 'computer use' — a capability allowing Claude to control computers by viewing screens, moving cursors, clicking, and typing. Computer use is available via the Anthropic API, Amazon Bedrock, and Google Cloud Vertex AI, with early adopters including Replit, The Browser Company, and Cognition. Both safety institutes (US AISI and UK AISI) conducted pre-deployment testing, and the model was assessed as remaining within ASL-2 under Anthropic's Responsible Scaling Policy.
Anthropic launches Claude 3.5 Sonnet, the first model in its Claude 3.5 family, claiming it outperforms Claude 3 Opus and competitor models on GPQA, MMLU, and HumanEval benchmarks while operating at twice the speed and mid-tier pricing ($3/$15 per million tokens). The model features a 200K context window, improved vision capabilities, and an internal agentic coding evaluation score of 64% versus 38% for Opus. Alongside the model, Anthropic introduces Artifacts on Claude.ai, a dedicated workspace for real-time editing of AI-generated content. The model was pre-deployment evaluated by the UK AI Safety Institute and assessed at ASL-2.