The post Apple Mac M5 System Exploited With Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI, Researchers Claim appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
In brief A security firm claims it built a working macOS kernel exploit targeting Apple’s M5 chip and Memory Integrity Enforcement system. The company says a preview version of Anthropic’s Claude Mythos AI helped identify bugs and assist with exploit development. Apple has not yet publicly commented on the claims. Apple devices have long been considered among the hardest consumer systems to hack because of the company’s tightly integrated hardware and software security. Now, a security startup claims a small team of researchers used a preview version of Anthropic’s Claude Mythos to build a working exploit against Apple’s new M5 chip protections in less than a week. In a Substack post published Thursday, the Vietnam-based Calif said it developed what it describes as the first public macOS kernel memory corruption exploit capable of surviving Apple’s new Memory
The post Anthropic Launches Claude AI Tools for Small Businesses appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Luisa Crawford
May 13, 2026 16:30
Anthropic’s Claude for Small Business integrates AI into tools like QuickBooks, HubSpot, and Canva, offering 15 workflows to streamline operations.
Anthropic has unveiled Claude for Small Business, an AI-driven solution designed to integrate seamlessly into the tools small businesses already use. The package includes connectors and workflows tailored to automate tasks across finance, marketing, operations, HR, and more—potentially leveling the playing field for smaller companies often left behind in AI adoption. Small businesses make up 44% of U.S. GDP and employ nearly half of the private-sector workforce, yet their uptake of AI has lagged. According to Anthropic, this is primarily due to tools that aren’t adapted to their workflows. With this launch, Anthropic aims to address that gap by embedding its Claude AI into platforms like I
OpenAI is going to let users access Codex, its desktop AI tool that can write code and use apps on your computer, from the ChatGPT app on your phone.
Following the surge in popularity for Anthropic's Claude Code, OpenAI has been working quickly to try and catch up, including by cutting back on "side quests," shutting down projects like the Sora video-generation tool, and focusing on growing its enterprise business. The company's push included the recently released major update for Codex that lets it operate apps on macOS - a potentially major step as part of its ambitions to make a desktop "superapp."
Codex in the ChatGPT mobile app lets …
Read the full story at The Verge.
Microsoft first started opening up access to Claude Code in December, inviting thousands of its own developers to use Anthropic's AI coding tool daily. It was part of an effort to get project managers, designers, and other employees to experiment with coding for the first time, and sources tell me that Claude Code has proved very popular inside Microsoft over the past six months. Perhaps a little too popular, as Microsoft is now preparing to walk back its Claude Code push.
I understand that Microsoft is planning to remove most of its Claude Code licenses and push many of its developers to use Copilot CLI instead. While Claude Code has been …
Read the full story at The Verge.
Cerebras, a Silicon Valley maker of artificial intelligence chips, began trading on the stock market on Thursday, as SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic also take steps to go public.
Apple has a design for AI life. It hopes to build on the outstanding hardware performance its systems already provide to create a fantastic environment in which AI developers can thrive. If this plan sounds familiar it’s because it’s all about the App Store, and while it’s easy to expect Apple’s revenue share to change, the plan still makes the company the custodian of the AI age.
The way it should work is if app developers see that one way to bring their AI services to billions of iPhones, iPad, and Mac users is to make AI agents available via Apple’s own portals. These will likely be via App Intents, enabling Siri to execute actions inside their apps without actively opening them.
The Information reports some developers are resistant to joining the initiative, in part because they want to avoid paying any fees. All the same, consider the moment, consider the meaning, and I think the significance is that Apple has at last got its act together with AI.
Ecosystem, services, store
Apple