Anthropic is bringing Claude Mythos to India, select organisations to get preview access
Anthropic is expanding its exclusive Mythos AI programme to more than 15 countries, including India, while broadening Project Glasswing. The move gives selected organisations access to powerful AI tools for cybersecurity.

Some organisations in India are gaining access to Anthropic’s security-focused AI programme Mythos, as the US-based AI company expands its reach among governments, cybersecurity agencies and critical infrastructure operators worldwide. The expansion comes alongside a wider rollout of Project Glasswing, Anthropic’s initiative aimed at helping trusted institutions use advanced artificial intelligence tools for national security, cyber defence and public-sector applications.
Anthropic says it is adding around 150 new organisations to the programme, taking the total number of participants to about 200 across more than 15 countries. The expansion marks the first major push beyond the US and UK and includes organisations operating in financial services, cybersecurity, technology, healthcare, communications, power, water and hardware sectors.
India is among the countries included in the latest rollout, alongside Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Japan and South Korea. While Anthropic has not publicly disclosed the names of the Indian organisations receiving access, the move reflects growing interest in using advanced AI systems to strengthen cybersecurity and protect critical infrastructure.
Mythos is not publicly available
Notably, the expansion is significant because Mythos is not a publicly available AI model. Anthropic launched Claude Mythos Preview in April and initially granted access to only about 50 organisations, most of them based in the United States. The company has previously argued that the model's advanced coding and vulnerability-discovery capabilities make it too powerful to release broadly without safeguards.
According to Anthropic, Mythos is designed to help organisations identify software flaws, detect weaknesses in complex codebases and improve cyber resilience before vulnerabilities can be exploited by attackers. The company says participating organisations include critical infrastructure providers and software vendors whose products are widely used by governments, businesses and millions of people worldwide.
The latest cohort reportedly includes major organisations such as Okta, Samsung, SK Hynix, SK Telecom, Euroclear, Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, and global payments network Swift. Nato and the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) have also been granted access. Earlier participants included Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, JPMorgan Chase and CrowdStrike.
What is Project Glasswing?
At the centre of this effort is Project Glasswing, Anthropic's industry collaboration programme that brings together technology companies, infrastructure providers, cybersecurity experts and governments to proactively identify and patch software vulnerabilities. Rather than focusing on offensive cyber capabilities, the initiative aims to use AI as a defensive tool to strengthen digital infrastructure.
Anthropic says organisations participating in Project Glasswing have already identified more than 10,000 vulnerabilities that were classified as high or critically severe. The company is also exploring ways to use AI to scale security reviews of open-source software, which forms the foundation of much of the internet's infrastructure but often lacks the resources needed for extensive security testing.
Could Anthropic become a $1 trillion company?
The international expansion also comes at a time when Anthropic is preparing for its next phase of growth. The company recently confidentially filed for an initial public offering (IPO) in the US, becoming the first major frontier AI company to formally begin the process of going public.
With investors continuing to pour money into artificial intelligence and demand for advanced AI models accelerating across industries, reports suggest the Claude maker could target a valuation of close to $1 trillion when it eventually debuts on public markets, potentially making it one of the world's most valuable listed technology companies.
Some organisations in India are gaining access to Anthropic’s security-focused AI programme Mythos, as the US-based AI company expands its reach among governments, cybersecurity agencies and critical infrastructure operators worldwide. The expansion comes alongside a wider rollout of Project Glasswing, Anthropic’s initiative aimed at helping trusted institutions use advanced artificial intelligence tools for national security, cyber defence and public-sector applications.
Anthropic says it is adding around 150 new organisations to the programme, taking the total number of participants to about 200 across more than 15 countries. The expansion marks the first major push beyond the US and UK and includes organisations operating in financial services, cybersecurity, technology, healthcare, communications, power, water and hardware sectors.
India is among the countries included in the latest rollout, alongside Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Japan and South Korea. While Anthropic has not publicly disclosed the names of the Indian organisations receiving access, the move reflects growing interest in using advanced AI systems to strengthen cybersecurity and protect critical infrastructure.
Mythos is not publicly available
Notably, the expansion is significant because Mythos is not a publicly available AI model. Anthropic launched Claude Mythos Preview in April and initially granted access to only about 50 organisations, most of them based in the United States. The company has previously argued that the model's advanced coding and vulnerability-discovery capabilities make it too powerful to release broadly without safeguards.
According to Anthropic, Mythos is designed to help organisations identify software flaws, detect weaknesses in complex codebases and improve cyber resilience before vulnerabilities can be exploited by attackers. The company says participating organisations include critical infrastructure providers and software vendors whose products are widely used by governments, businesses and millions of people worldwide.
The latest cohort reportedly includes major organisations such as Okta, Samsung, SK Hynix, SK Telecom, Euroclear, Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, and global payments network Swift. Nato and the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) have also been granted access. Earlier participants included Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, JPMorgan Chase and CrowdStrike.
What is Project Glasswing?
At the centre of this effort is Project Glasswing, Anthropic's industry collaboration programme that brings together technology companies, infrastructure providers, cybersecurity experts and governments to proactively identify and patch software vulnerabilities. Rather than focusing on offensive cyber capabilities, the initiative aims to use AI as a defensive tool to strengthen digital infrastructure.
Anthropic says organisations participating in Project Glasswing have already identified more than 10,000 vulnerabilities that were classified as high or critically severe. The company is also exploring ways to use AI to scale security reviews of open-source software, which forms the foundation of much of the internet's infrastructure but often lacks the resources needed for extensive security testing.
Could Anthropic become a $1 trillion company?
The international expansion also comes at a time when Anthropic is preparing for its next phase of growth. The company recently confidentially filed for an initial public offering (IPO) in the US, becoming the first major frontier AI company to formally begin the process of going public.
With investors continuing to pour money into artificial intelligence and demand for advanced AI models accelerating across industries, reports suggest the Claude maker could target a valuation of close to $1 trillion when it eventually debuts on public markets, potentially making it one of the world's most valuable listed technology companies.