The Locked Box: Why the Most Powerful AI Is Vanishing From Public Access
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发布于 2026-05-01
As frontier AI labs gate their most powerful models behind exclusive partnerships, a two-tier AI economy is taking shape. This piece examines Project Glasswing, Claude Mythos, and the structural forces driving the open-to-restricted shift — and what it means for builders who assumed the best AI would always be a public API call away.
The Locked Box: Why the Most Powerful AI Is Vanishing From Public Access
Remember when "open" was the whole point?
GPT-2 was "too dangerous" to release. The AI community lost its mind. "What if bad actors use it?" everyone asked, breathless. The safety team at OpenAI published a blog post. Papers were written. The model was gated behind a gradual release.
That was 2019.
Now models can find zero-day vulnerabilities in OpenBSD, Linux, and every major web browser. Nicolas Carlini — one of the most cited AI researchers alive — says he found more bugs in two weeks with the new systems than in his entire career combined.
Nobody's flinching.
Because the real story isn't danger. It's control.
The New Playbook: Build It, Gate It
Here's what's actually happening in 2026:
Frontier labs are building extraordinary models. Then they're not releasing them publicly. Not as APIs. Not as open weights. Not even as research papers with full weights.
Instead: restricted partner programs. Private betas. "Strategic access" for handpicked organizations.
Anthropic's Project Glasswing is the cleanest example. Claude Mythos — a model so good at finding security vulnerabilities that it found undiscovered bugs in decades-old code — isn't available to you. It's available to 40 partners under heavy NDAs.
OpenAI has been doing this for a while too. The o-series models that power coding and reasoning? The full capabilities of the latest systems? Selective access. Waitlists. "Enterprise only" tiers that materialize when someone big signs a contract.
The pattern is clear: build the best thing, put it in a locked box, and charge rent for the key.