Let me explain what’s happening.
In late March 2026, Anthropic publicly hinted that one of their internal frontier models, called Claude Mythos, showed advanced offensive cybersecurity capabilities, including autonomous vulnerability discovery and exploit generation. Because of this, they stated that rollout would be tightly controlled under staged access and safety evaluations.
Over the past two weeks, we’ve seen a significant increase in platform hacks, from Web3 platforms to government infrastructure to legacy platforms. And here’s the reason:
Hacks have been happening before, they’re not new, and automation and repeated attacks are not new either. But you know what’s new? Intelligent automation.
Automation that doesn’t just work with a checklist and repeated patterns, but can actually create a sandbox and try multiple attack strategies in an isolated environment repeatedly, then identify where the vulnerability is and use all the knowledge on the internet to figure out how to exploit it.
Automated attacks used to follow a blueprint, but now it’s different. There’s no fixed blueprint. You can infuse AI into a hacking process multiple times and get different results. And these tools have a mind of their own. Over the next few months, we will be seeing a lot of news like this. It doesn’t mean these platforms are not safe, it just means AI is moving faster than anyone can adapt, and now we all have to 10x our processes.
We live in a new world.
On vercel’s issue? They’ve announced that only a few users were affected and released a process to support all users and better increase their hosted platforms.
Introducing Claude Opus 4.7, our most capable Opus model yet.
It handles long-running tasks with more rigor, follows instructions more precisely, and verifies its own outputs before reporting back.
You can hand off your hardest work with less supervision.
When you install WhatsApp, it initialize and create it's own folder/file system right after you grant permissions, it has access to add and delete its content added to the folder. This folder is accessed by file utility apps, hence showing on your gallery app.