Close Menu
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
Trending

World Series of Poker adds SOL payments for tournament buy-ins

6 minutes ago

Crypto Outflows Are Sentiment Shock, Not Structural Crisis: CoinShares

11 minutes ago

Botanix Will Shut Down Bitcoin Layer-2 Network in July, Citing Lack of DeFi Demand

16 minutes ago
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
Market Data Newsletter
Thursday, June 11
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»The Internet Is Furious at Anthropic After Claude Fable 5 Release
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

The Internet Is Furious at Anthropic After Claude Fable 5 Release

News RoomBy News Room1 hour agoNo Comments9 Mins Read1,046 Views
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
The Internet Is Furious at Anthropic After Claude Fable 5 Release
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

Listen to the article

0:00
0:00

Key Takeaways

Playback Speed

Select a Voice

In brief

  • Claude Fable 5 burns through subscription limits roughly twice as fast as Opus 4.8—one test drained a $100 Max plan in under nine minutes.
  • Anthropic’s system card confirmed the model silently degrades its own performance on research tasks without notifying the user.
  • Fable 5 and Mythos 5 come with mandatory 30-day data retention.

Anthropic dropped its most powerful public model on Tuesday, and by Wednesday, a significant chunk of the AI community wished it hadn’t.

The consensus around Claude Fable 5—the first publicly accessible version of the company’s restricted Mythos-class technology—appears to be that it’s pretty good at coding, and produces amazing results in everyday sessions. But it launched with some heavy complaints attached: It burns tokens at a ruinous rate; it secretly self-sabbotages for certain research tasks; and it forces every user into a 30-day data retention policy with no exceptions.

The backlash was immediate and loud, cutting across researchers, developers, founders, and open-source advocates. Not a normal launch-day grumble. Something closer to a reckoning.

The token furnace

The first thing users noticed had nothing to do with safety. Fable 5 costs $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens—double what Claude Opus 4.8 runs.

That pricing is aggressive enough on its own, but the real pain for users is how the model behaves inside subscription plans. Fable 5 counts double against usage limits compared to Opus, meaning the same work on Fable drains your plan allowance twice as fast before you’ve paid a cent in API fees.

In practice, things got worse. In our own quick test, Fable consumed our daily quota in a single prompt. Things don’t get any better if you are one of those clients with deep pockets. Bleeping Computer also tested Fable and found it drained a $100 Max subscription’s daily allowance in just under nine minutes.

Scrimba CEO Per Borgen did the math in public: “Just tried Fable. It burned 1.3M tokens in 7 minutes. That’s $160 per hour. Equivalent to a $333k/year salary,” he posted on X.

Theo from T3 Chat posted that he’d spent over $1,000 in tokens in one day on his $200 subscription plan. Josh Ellithorpe, CTO at Pixelated Ink, said Fable 5 “burns tokens like no other model,” giving him only a few prompts before draining out his quota. “Can’t even review this, since my testing is so limited,” he ranted.

Anthropic’s answer is that Workflow mode—the feature that burns most aggressively—breaks complex prompts into parallel subagent tasks, which costs more compute by design.

There’s also a new system prompt, which is around 120,000 tokens long, and is loaded into every new conversation. For context, this is around the same token context window that GPT-4o could handle before collapsing.

The company also says Fable 5’s per-task efficiency is better than it looks per-token, since it produces more thorough output with less iteration. That may be true in controlled benchmarks. On live subscriptions with hard daily limits, users experienced it as a machine eating their budget in minutes.

The model that lies without lying

The second complaint was more damaging because it came straight from Anthropic’s own documentation. Buried in Fable 5’s system card, the company disclosed that when the model detects a user is working on frontier large-language-model development—pretraining pipelines, distributed training infrastructure, machine-learning accelerator design—it does not refuse to reply and does not fall back to a smaller model. It silently nerfs itself through prompt modification, steering vectors, or parameter-efficient fine-tuning, without telling the user anything has changed.

the claude fable 5 nerf for AI research has induced the angriest reaction from AI researchers that I’ve ever seen in my life

— Ethan Caballero (@ethanCaballero) June 10, 2026

In other words, researchers don’t know if they are paying for Fable to reply and are getting Opus responses. It also makes it hard for users to know what made their prompt fail.

“Unlike our interventions for cybersecurity, biology and chemistry, and distillation attempts, these safeguards will not be visible to the user,” Anthropic wrote in Fable’s System Card. “Instead, the safeguards will limit effectiveness through methods such as prompt modification, steering vectors, or parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT).”

That distinction matters enormously to researchers. As AI newsletter Latent Space noted, a model that refuses openly lets researchers understand a boundary. A model that falls back to a weaker version is detectable. But a model that appears to help while covertly delivering worse output destroys scientific reproducibility—a failed result could come from the researcher’s idea, their implementation, or an invisible intervention that was never disclosed.

Anthropic estimated this would affect approximately 0.03% of traffic. The open-source and research communities found that number irrelevant to the principle involved.

“Dear Anthropic, you broke our trust and I don’t think you’ll ever get it back. My tokens will no longer fly your way,” Arthur Zucker, a core contributor at Hugging Face, posted on X.

Dear Anthropic, your broke our trust and I don’t think you’ll ever get it back.

My tokens will no longer fly your way.

— Arthur Zucker (@art_zucker) June 10, 2026

Mikel Artetxe, cofounder of Reka AI, also bashed this decision:

“Brilliant idea! Next up: Apple randomly reboots your Mac if you’re building competing tech, Gmail silently edits your email if you mention rival platforms, and Tesla Autopilot swerves if it detects you’re working on self-driving cars. All in the name of safety, of course,” he posted.

The researchers who got hit hardest weren’t the big labs with proprietary infrastructure but the academics, startups, and independent builders using Claude as a public tool—exactly the people Anthropic’s safety rhetoric has always claimed to protect. AlphaXiv, an open research platform, called the practice a precedent that “is not safety,” arguing that safety policies should be transparent and auditable.

As believers of open research, we are disappointed to see Anthropic silently degrading Fable 5 for AI development

“Any topic related to building pretraining pipelines, distributed training infrastructure, or ML accelerator design… may have limited effectiveness through Claude… pic.twitter.com/ELE8lqQWaF

— alphaXiv (@askalphaxiv) June 10, 2026

Nathan Lambert who just started a role at Arcee AI after working with the Allen Institute put it more simply: “To me this paints Anthropic clearly as anti science, and therefore anti progress and anti safety,” he wrote.

I don’t really want to have to go to bat against Anthropic, but they’ve just been unnecessarily antagonistic to all of China, then not so subtly to open weight models, and now more broadly open AI research. What’s next on the list?

— Nathan Lambert (@natolambert) June 9, 2026

Pseudonymous user “CalleBTC,” an AI and crypto developer who had been waiting on Fable to help train a world model, summed up the frustration too. “Anthropic has lost the plot. I was literally waiting for Mythos to help me train a world model. Instead, they chose to cuck their model to stifle their competition,” he said, calling the move “deeply unethical and disrespectful to developers and scientists.”

Overall, researchers argued that Fable’s restrictions extend beyond specific topics and may be influenced by how the model classifies users.

Matt, I can’t even say “hello” to Fable 5 except in incognito mode (memories off), because it knows I am a biomedical researcher!

It would be nice not to ban biomedical scientists before talking access. Isn’t your comment ironic? Let’s first see if you can fix punishing us! https://t.co/mBYSu9tNIb pic.twitter.com/IKI9ksBBNL

— Derya Unutmaz, MD (@DeryaTR_) June 10, 2026

“Your prompt is mine”

The third grievance affected enterprise users most directly, but the implications reached everyone. Per Anthropic’s own announcement, all traffic on Mythos-class models—Fable 5, Mythos 5, and any future models at similar capability levels—is subject to mandatory 30-day data retention across every platform where these models are offered, including third-party surfaces like AWS Bedrock and Google Vertex AI.

The company assures this data will be deleted after 30 days in “almost all cases.”

The problem for enterprise users isn’t what Anthropic says it will do. It’s what the policy structurally requires. Companies handling privileged legal communications, healthcare records, confidential source code, may be in trouble in case they use these models. If there are specific privacy agreements with Anthropic, users argue they should be updated to guarantee privacy.

The compliance problem goes geographic too. European companies operating under GDPR’s data minimization rules, or any organization requiring demonstrable zero-retention for regulated workflows, are simply locked out of Fable 5 until Anthropic offers a carve-out. Pseudonym X user Lisan al Gaib, a well-known personality in the AI community, flagged the consequence directly:

“Anthropic just delegated a lot of European companies to the permanent underclass. If Anthropic saves data for Claude Mythos and Fable 5 for 30 days, then all companies that require zero data retention simply can’t use them.”

Anthropic just delegated a lot of European companies to the permanent underclass

if Anthropic saves data for Claude Mythos and Fable 5 for 30 days, then all companies that require zero data retention simply can’t use them

— Lisan al Gaib (@scaling01) June 10, 2026

Hugging Face CEO Clement Delangue framed the week’s events inside a larger argument:

“Concentration of power, capabilities and economic wealth is the biggest risk in AI,” he wrote. “We need open science and open-source more than ever!”

Another user wrote: “All jokes aside, it’s very clear that Anthropic is the direct path to the worst type of dystopia. Their CEO is against the very technology he creates. Restricting knowledge and education on ML related topics is beyond despicable.”

Fable 5 is free on Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise plans until June 22. After that, it moves to usage credits only—API rates, no subscription inclusion—with Anthropic saying it will restore broader access “as soon as capacity expands.”

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.



Read the full article here

Fact Checker

Verify the accuracy of this article using AI-powered analysis and real-time sources.

Get Your Fact Check Report

Enter your email to receive detailed fact-checking analysis

5 free reports remaining

Continue with Full Access

You've used your 5 free reports. Sign up for unlimited access!

Already have an account? Sign in here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
News Room
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

The FSNN News Room is the voice of our in-house journalists, editors, and researchers. We deliver timely, unbiased reporting at the crossroads of finance, cryptocurrency, and global politics, providing clear, fact-driven analysis free from agendas.

Related Articles

Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

World Series of Poker adds SOL payments for tournament buy-ins

6 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Crypto Outflows Are Sentiment Shock, Not Structural Crisis: CoinShares

11 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Botanix Will Shut Down Bitcoin Layer-2 Network in July, Citing Lack of DeFi Demand

16 minutes ago
Media & Culture

Google Isn’t a Common Carrier, Ohio Court of Appeals Rules

47 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Kalshi now requires users to reveal employers as it fights insider trading and market manipulation

1 hour ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

CFTC Proposes Prediction Market Rules Favoring Sports Contracts

1 hour ago
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Crypto Outflows Are Sentiment Shock, Not Structural Crisis: CoinShares

11 minutes ago

Botanix Will Shut Down Bitcoin Layer-2 Network in July, Citing Lack of DeFi Demand

16 minutes ago

Google Isn’t a Common Carrier, Ohio Court of Appeals Rules

47 minutes ago

Kalshi now requires users to reveal employers as it fights insider trading and market manipulation

1 hour ago
Latest Posts

CFTC Proposes Prediction Market Rules Favoring Sports Contracts

1 hour ago

The Internet Is Furious at Anthropic After Claude Fable 5 Release

1 hour ago

Congress Just Rushed Through a Disastrous Copyright Office Overhaul

2 hours ago

Subscribe to News

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

At FSNN – Free Speech News Network, we deliver unfiltered reporting and in-depth analysis on the stories that matter most. From breaking headlines to global perspectives, our mission is to keep you informed, empowered, and connected.

FSNN.net is owned and operated by GlobalBoost Media
, an independent media organization dedicated to advancing transparency, free expression, and factual journalism across the digital landscape.

Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
Latest News

World Series of Poker adds SOL payments for tournament buy-ins

6 minutes ago

Crypto Outflows Are Sentiment Shock, Not Structural Crisis: CoinShares

11 minutes ago

Botanix Will Shut Down Bitcoin Layer-2 Network in July, Citing Lack of DeFi Demand

16 minutes ago

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2026 GlobalBoost Media. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Our Authors
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

🍪

Cookies

We and our selected partners wish to use cookies to collect information about you for functional purposes and statistical marketing. You may not give us your consent for certain purposes by selecting an option and you can withdraw your consent at any time via the cookie icon.

Cookie Preferences

Manage Cookies

Cookies are small text that can be used by websites to make the user experience more efficient. The law states that we may store cookies on your device if they are strictly necessary for the operation of this site. For all other types of cookies, we need your permission. This site uses various types of cookies. Some cookies are placed by third party services that appear on our pages.

Your permission applies to the following domains:

  • https://fsnn.net
Necessary
Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
Statistic
Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Preferences
Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
Marketing
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.