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EU says OpenAI offers to open access to cyber security model

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Date Published
11 May 2026
Priority Score
3
Australian
Yes
Created
12 May 2026, 12:00 am

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Anthropic not there yet.

Summary

OpenAI has proactively offered the European Commission access to its cybersecurity features through an 'EU Cyber Action Plan' led by George Osborne. This initiative aims to democratize defensive tools for trusted actors, directly addressing the dual-use nature of frontier AI models in offensive and defensive cyber operations. While the EU is engaging in similar discussions with Anthropic, the move signals a shift toward voluntary transparency by major AI labs to mitigate systemic digital risks. These developments are critical for global AI safety policy as they establish precedents for how governments and frontier labs collaborate on risk reduction in the cybersecurity domain.

Body

The European Commission has welcomed ⁠an offer by US artificial intelligence giant OpenAI to provide open access to its cyber security features, but said its rival Anthropic ‌has not yet gone so ‌far. While ‌the Commission has received the ‌offer from OpenAI, it has ⁠had four or five meetings with Anthropic, though no discussions on possible access to its AI models have been held so ​far, spokesperson Thomas Regnier said during a daily press briefing. "With one (OpenAI), you have ⁠a company proactively offering to give access to the company. With the other one (Anthropic), we have good exchanges though we're not at a stage where we can speculate on potential access or not," he said. Former British finance minister George Osborne, who heads the group's "OpenAI ​for Countries" initiative, has sent ⁠an explanatory  letter to the ⁠Commission and member states. "Through the OpenAI EU Cyber Action Plan, we ​will work with European policymakers, institutions and ‌businesses by ⁠democratising access to the defensive tools that trusted actors can use to strengthen shared security, support public safety and ‌reflect European priorities," he said in the letter, according to a statement. The OpenAI letter came a ​month after the European Commission said the company's ChatGPT should be considered a large online search engine under the rules ‌of ⁠the Digital Services ​Act, and be regulated as such.