---
title: 'One man just liberated Fable... and now it’s illegal'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=ey_GaPdC9zk'
video_id: 'ey_GaPdC9zk'
date: 2026-06-28
duration_sec: 314
---

# One man just liberated Fable... and now it’s illegal

> Source: [One man just liberated Fable... and now it’s illegal](https://youtube.com/watch?v=ey_GaPdC9zk)

## Summary

Three days after Anthropic released Claude Fable, the US government ordered its removal due to national security fears after a user jailbroke the model. The directive restricts access by foreign nationals, including Anthropic's own staff, marking the first time a major AI company has pulled a live model. The video explains the jailbreak technique, the government's response, and the controversy surrounding the decision.

### Key Points

- **Fable's rapid rollout and government intervention** [0:00] — Claude Fable was released, but within 3 days the US government stepped in over national security concerns, forcing users back to Opus 4.8.
- **Capabilities and restrictions of Fable vs Mythos** [0:18] — Fable is a safety-classified version of Mythos 5—a powerful cyber model locked behind 'Glass Wing' for trusted partners like the US government. Fable reroutes unsafe requests to a weaker model.
- **Jailbreak by an anonymous user** [1:29] — User 'Plenty The Liberator' jailbroke Fable by breaking requests into innocent fragments using Unicode characters, roleplay farming, or large context confusion, bypassing safety classifiers.
- **Government export control directive** [2:35] — On June 15, 2026, the US government issued an export control directive signed by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, banning foreign nationals from accessing Fable 5 or Mythos 5, even Anthropic's foreign-born employees.
- **Anthropic pulls both models** [3:20] — In response, Anthropic removed both Fable and Mythos for all users, demoting them back to Opus 4.8—the first time a major AI company has taken down a public model due to government order.
- **Backlash and speculation** [3:36] — Developers are unhappy with Anthropic due to reports of intentional performance degradation on research tasks, while some speculate the move was a publicity stunt to boost pre-IPO valuation and create regulatory moats.
- **Competition and future outlook** [4:01] — Leaked benchmarks suggest Mistral may have a better model, and new releases from OpenAI and Google are expected, though Anthropic's current models remain powerful.

### Conclusion

The government's intervention highlights the tension between AI safety and accessibility, as a powerful model was withdrawn following a jailbreak, leaving users reliant on an older, less capable version while the industry anticipates new competitors.

## Transcript

Over the weekend, something crazy
happened. It just 3 days after the
release of Claude Fable, the US
government stepped in and curb-stomped
it in the name of national security. And
that's bad news if you just FOMO
subscribed to Claude Pro to try out
Fable because now you'll see this
disappointing message if you try to use
it and instead be forced to use the
negative IQ Opus 4.8. But it's all for
your own good because it only took
someone a few hours to jailbreak Fable
and turn it into an unstoppable cyber
weapon. And that's pretty ironic because
here in the land of the free, an
American company that will not stop
talking about AI safety just got
safety'd by its own government. In
today's video, we'll find out how and
why our dear leaders in government are
keeping us safe from the horrors of
linear algebra. It is June 15th, 2026
and you're watching The Code Report.
About 2 months ago on April 7th, we were
first introduced to Mythos 5, the raw
unmuzzled model with the strongest
cybersecurity capabilities of anything
out there. But it was locked behind a
program called Glass Wing, only
available to trusted partners like major
corporations and the US government
itself. The reason Mythos can't be given
to normies though is because it could
easily be used as a cyber weapon in the
wrong hands. To prevent that, Anthropic
created a different product called Fable
5, which is literally the same exact
model but with safety classifiers bolted
on. That means if you ask it to do bad
things like create an NPM package that
turns the banking system into a
Minecraft server, the Fable's guardrails
will reroute your request to Opus 4.8
for a dumber, more wholesome response.
So basically, Mythos and Fable have the
same brain but Fable has a child lock on
it. If Fable went public and gained
hundreds of billions of users overnight
and it was awesome. It was by far the
best coding AI model I've ever used and
people were building all sorts of crazy
apps with it. Life was good for about 3
days. Then, of course, an anonymous
internet user who goes by Plenty The
Liberator defeats the guardrails and
jailbreaks it. He's basically the
internet's let's see if I can penetrate
this thing guy and is famous for
breaking other AI systems. And on June
10th, he posted a jailbreak on X
claiming he popped Fable's guardrails
wide open and got it producing exactly
the same stuff the child block was built
to block. And that's despite the fact
that Anthropic had spent thousands of
hours red teaming and trying to break
its own guardrails internally. But the
jailbreak wasn't some kind of sci-fi
exploit. It actually works a lot more
like money laundering. If Fable has a
safety classifier watching for bad
requests, but you can break dirty
requests down into smaller
innocent-looking fragments by wrapping
them in weird Unicode characters, by
doing roleplay farming, or by confusing
the model in a very large context
conversation. Due to national security,
I can't be any more specific than that,
but this weakness was brought to
Anthropic's attention and they were
initially asked to take the model down,
but they refused. Then on Friday at 5:21
p.m. Eastern time, Anthropic gets a
letter not from a customer, but from the
United States government. This letter
was an export control directive signed
off by Commerce Secretary Howard
Lutnick. And the order was that no
foreign national may access Fable 5 or
Mythos 5. Not abroad, not in the US, and
not even Anthropic's own foreign-born
employees are allowed to touch it. That
last one is pretty crazy. The government
told a company that some of its own
staff are no longer allowed to use the
product they built. That means guys like
Andre Karpathy who just recently got the
job at Anthropic, they can't even use
Fable. In response to that directive,
they decided to hit the big red button
and yanked Fable and Mythos for
everybody. Now everybody's been quietly
demoted back to Opus 4.8. And this is
the first time in history a major AI
company has pulled a live public model
off the shelf because the federal
government said so. Many developers out
there are not too happy with Anthropic
right now because on top of this whole
situation, there was already backlash
over reports that Anthropic was
intentionally degrading Mythos and Fable
performance on certain AI research jobs
without making it obvious to users. But
others out there are speculating that
this whole thing was a calculated
publicity stunt to continue pumping up
Anthropic's pre-IPO numbers while
simultaneously building a regulatory
moat around it. But I think the only
thing that can truly stop Anthropic at
this point is a better model from a
competitor. A leaked benchmark shows
that Mistral might have that model, but
we're also awaiting new releases from
OpenAI and Google. Most of what we hear
about AI is either non-stop hype from
Big Tech or AI doomers warning us that
the Skynet apocalypse will destroy the
human race. But if you want to actually
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been The Code Report. Thanks for
watching, and I will see you in the next
one.
