A developer pushes one file. It contains an AWS access key left in a configuration block. Five minutes later, CI catches it. By then, the secret is in the remote repository, cached by mirrors and potentially forked. The developer rotates the key, scrubs the commit history and spends the rest of the afternoon on incident response. The real question isn’t how to clean up faster — it’s why the secret left the developer’s machine in the first place. The Five-Minute Gap Most engineering teams have invested in CI-based secret scanning . Tools such as GitHub Advanced Security, GitGuardian and TruffleHog’s CI integration catch leaked credentials in pull requests and pushed branches. This is good, but it’s also too late. The GitGuardian 2026 State of Secrets Sprawl report found that 29 million secrets were detected on GitHub in 2025 alone — a 34% year-over-year increase and the largest single-year jump ever recorded. Worse, 64% of secrets leaked back in 202...
Anthropic has abruptly walked back a controversial, unannounced policy that degraded the performance of its latest model, Claude Fable 5. The reversal follows intense backlash from the machine learning community, which criticized the company for a lack of transparency and anti-competitive behavior, according to a Wired report. The controversy began earlier this week with the release of Claude Fable 5, a version of Anthropic’s highly sophisticated Mythos system equipped with specialized national security guardrails. While the company openly said it would reroute hazardous prompts regarding cybersecurity, biology, and chemistry to less advanced models, it did not disclose a separate restriction: silently throttling requests tied to frontier LLM development. AI researchers quickly noticed that when Fable 5 was tasked with training competing LLMs, debugging AI code, or optimizing neural architecture, the model would covertly fail or degrade its output without notifying the user. This hi...