- Fable 5 is back after an American shutdown
- Anthropic called it “a misunderstanding”
- The case could reshape future AI launches
Anthropic’s Fable 5 is back after the US government lifted export controls that had forced the company to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 earlier in June. The company said it believed the shutdown was based on “a misunderstanding” after officials raised concerns about a possible jailbreak and national security risk.
In a statement on its website, Anthropic said it is not opposed to the US government having the power to block unsafe AI releases, but argued that this should not have been the case with Fable 5.
“As we have stated publicly, we believe the government should have the ability to block unsafe deployments as part of a statutory process that is transparent, fair, clear, and based on technical facts. This action does not adhere to those principles,” Anthropic said.
Anthropic is now working to restore access to Fable 5 for its users.
The more interesting question now is not simply whether Fable 5 is available again, but what this episode says about the future of launching AI models. The most powerful AI models may no longer be treated as regular software updates. Going forward, they may increasingly be treated as strategic technologies that governments can stop, limit and negotiate.
What happened?
On June 9, Anthropic released Fable 5, a limited version of its Mythos 5. Anthropic said that Fable 5 had been released with safeguards designed to prevent misuse in cybersecurity attacks, while the entire Mythos 5 was kept under tighter control due to its more advanced capabilities.
On June 12, Anthropic received an export control directive from the US government. The directive suspended access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for foreign nationals, including Anthropic employees. Anthropic said the practical effect was that it had to disable the models for all customers to ensure compliance.
The question seems to have centered on whether it was possible to jailbreak the Fable 5 and bypass its firewall. (A jailbreak is essentially a method of persuading an AI model to bypass its security restrictions).
Anthropic pushed back, saying it had not been shown evidence of a broad or universal jailbreak. Access is now being restored after the US Department of Commerce lifted the restrictions. Pakinomist reports that the restrictions were lifted after enhanced security measures were put in place.
In its response to the US government’s restrictions, Anthropic argued that “perfect jailbreak resistance is not currently possible.” Its case was that if every narrow jailbreak is enough to force a model offline, then no frontier AI model can ever be secure enough to launch. The company warned that adopting this standard across the industry could “stop all new model implementations.”
Why this matters beyond Anthropic
Until recently, a new AI model launch mostly meant faster responses, more coding features, or smarter responses. Fable 5’s shutdown shows that frontier models are now strong enough for governments to step in before, during or after their launch. It changes the relationship between AI companies, users, developers and regulators in a way we will have to get used to.
OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 rollout has already been limited for similar reasons. Pakinomist reported on June 26 that OpenAI had delayed a full public launch of GPT-5.6 at the request of the US government, with access limited at first to a small group of controlled partners whose details were shared with authorities.
Fable 5 may be back, but recent developments have changed the mood around launching frontier AI models. A model can be announced, celebrated, pulled offline, negotiated and restored in a matter of weeks. Anthropic may call this “a misunderstanding,” but it also looks like a preview of how the most powerful AI systems can be controlled from now on.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews and opinions in your feeds.

The best business laptops for all budgets



