Canada’s artificial intelligence minister said Tuesday the federal government now has access to Anthropic’s Mythos model — an AI platform so powerful that the corporate has withheld it from most people.
AI Minister Evan Solomon said the federal government has signed onto Project Glasswing, which Anthropic launched earlier this 12 months to permit the U.S. government and a limited variety of top tech firms to make use of Mythos to scan its systems for security vulnerabilities.
Anthropic said earlier Tuesday it was expanding this system to 150 additional organizations in greater than 15 countries.
“I can confirm that the Canadian government is an element now of Project Glasswing, which allows firms to have access to Mythos,” Solomon told reporters after a cupboard meeting in Ottawa.
“So we do have access, we’re a part of Project Glasswing, I’ll confirm that, and thru the Canadian Cyber Security Centre, we have now access Mythos now. So it’s an important step for Canadians and for our government to be certain that that we have now access and we are able to protect our institutions and our countries.”
Solomon said he couldn’t give details on which firms have access to Mythos.
Anthropic also declined to call specific firms getting access but said they cover industries reminiscent of health care, power, water, communications and hardware. The expansion also includes government organizations, the corporate said.
When it announced the creation of Mythos this spring, Anthropic said the model was so “strikingly capable” at hacking and cybersecurity work that it could only release it to a small group of trusted organizations.

The corporate said Project Glasswing was created in hopes of securing the world’s critical software from “severe” fallout that the brand new model could pose to public safety, national security and the economy — particularly if it was utilized in a significant cyberattack.

Get breaking National news
Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox because it happens so you will not miss a trending story.
Solomon said on the time that withholding Mythos from the general public was “the responsible path and offers people protecting critical systems a head start.”
Anthropic said Tuesday its partners using Mythos thus far — including Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft — have found greater than 10,000 security flaws they considered highly or critically severe, though some industry experts have said fears of unfettered hacking have been overstated.
Project Glasswing goals to bolster major software infrastructure before AI as powerful as Mythos is widely available from other providers, a prospect that Anthropic says is between six and 12 months away.
The corporate has said it goals to bring Mythos-class models to all of its customers, with additional safeguards, in the approaching weeks.
The expansion of Mythos’ rollout comes after Anthropic filed confidentially for what might be certainly one of the most important initial public offerings in history, culminating a frenzy of business and government interest in its AI.
Solomon says AI strategy to emphasise privacy, constructing ‘trust’
The announcement of Canada’s involvement in testing Mythos also comes ahead of the expected release this week of the federal government’s recent AI strategy, which Solomon said Tuesday will emphasize boosting Canadians’ trust within the technology.
“It’ll be lots on trust, lots on empowering employees, lots on constructing Canada. You’ll see the small print later this week,” he told reporters.
Ottawa has previously said the long-delayed strategy will include details on recent privacy and online safety laws the federal government will introduce to tackle concerns around AI.

Solomon said he’s working with Culture Minister Marc Miller and Justice Minister Sean Fraser on the laws he’s leading that can update Canada’s private sector privacy laws. Miller is charge of a brand new online harms bill that can cover AI chatbots, which Solomon has consulted on.
Solomon wouldn’t say if those bills will probably be tabled before Parliament breaks for the summer in lower than three weeks.
“Sooner or later, you’re going to see it, but I’d just say it’s a very vital element of constructing the trust for the AI strategy and for other things,” he said. “We’ve got to guard Canadians in the beginning.
“We could have laws, comprehensive laws, that can be certain that that we’re protecting … in the beginning children, Canadians’ privacy and Canadians’ data.”
Other expected elements within the strategy include sovereign compute infrastructure, support for Canadian AI firms and international co-ordination. The strategy can be expected to offer AI training and education for Canadians.
Solomon has also said it would consider the technology’s impacts on the labour market.
—With files from the Canadian Press, the Associated Press and Reuters
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

