TL;DR
Anthropic pulled Fable 5 and Mythos after the US government claimed a jailbreak and imposed export controls
Framer 3.0 puts AI agents directly on your canvas to build and edit your live site
Figma's new Chrome extension drops live websites into your canvas as editable layers
Cursor lets you bring your own API key, but the best parts still run on their models
Pippit lets you clone winning video ads and generate launch content
Tella's new MCP lets your agents fetch transcripts, edit, and publish videos for you
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WELL… THAT DIDN’T LAST LONG
Welp, it was just last week that I was sharing that Anthropic's Fable 5 was officially launched. Over that weekend, Anthropic pulled access to its newly released AI models Mythos 5 and Fable 5 after the US government imposed sweeping restrictions on who could use them.
The government claimed it found a jailbreak in Fable 5, one that could bypass its safety limits. Under export control rules, Anthropic had to immediately cut off access to any foreign national, inside or outside the US. The only way to do that was to pull the models entirely. Both went dark.
Quick backstory: Mythos is the model Anthropic built earlier this year and decided not to release publicly. It was too good at finding cybersecurity vulnerabilities, operating at the level of the most skilled hackers in the world. So instead of a public launch, they ran Project Glasswing, a controlled rollout to over 200 companies and agencies to help patch the holes Mythos could find. Ten thousand vulnerabilities repaired before anyone else touched it. Fable 5 was the consumer version of that, still powerful, but with guardrails. That's the one the government flagged.
Anthropic pushed back hard, calling the action disproportionate and warning it could "essentially halt" new frontier AI models if applied broadly. Leaders spent the weekend on calls with the Secretary of Commerce and the National Cyber Director. David Sacks, the administration's AI advisor, said the ball is in Anthropic's court.
The problem is there is no clean fix. Researchers are clear that all models can be jailbroken. There is no permanent patch, just an ongoing arms race. The government telling Anthropic to simply "fix the code" misses that entirely.
This is the first time the US government has used export controls to pull a consumer AI product from the market. The move was abrupt, opaque, and without clear legal authority cited. It also cut off Anthropic's own foreign national employees, many of whom are likely critical to building whatever comes next, while DeepSeek and Alibaba keep shipping.
OUR TAKE
The government found a jailbreak in a consumer AI model and responded by pulling it from the market with no clear process, no transparent reasoning, and no realistic fix on the table.
Anthropic has spent years being the responsible one. They turned down DoD contracts over autonomous weapons. They built Project Glasswing specifically to get ahead of exactly this kind of risk. And they still got hit with the bluntest instrument available.
The jailbreak concern might be real. But the way this was handled looks less like regulation and more like a warning shot.
Every AI lab is watching how this resolves.
QUICK HITS
Framer launches 3.0: Framer just put AI agents directly on your canvas. They generate layouts, write CMS content, and fix issues while you stay in control. Branching gives you a sandbox to experiment without touching your live site, and you can trigger changes from Slack, GitHub, Claude Code, or whatever agent you're already in.
Figma now lets you copy/paste live websites straight into your canvas: New Chrome extension captures any live page or element from your browser and drops it into Figma as editable layers, not screenshots. No codebase, no terminal, no rebuilding from scratch. Pull exactly what's in production and start riffing from there.
Cursor now lets you bring your own API key: You can wire in your own Claude, GPT, or Gemini key and send unlimited messages at your own cost. Catch is, Tab autocomplete still runs on Cursor's own models and ignores your key entirely. You own the chat layer, you rent the part that makes Cursor feel like Cursor.
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YOUR COMPETITORS ARE USING YOUR COMPETITORS' ADS AGAINST THEM
Turn any winning video ad into your own launch content, in about an hour, for free.
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Why build this? Most solo builders launch with either no marketing content or content that looks like it was made in Canva at midnight. Pippit flips that. It's an AI content creation agent built specifically for conversion, not just aesthetics. The reference video feature is where it gets interesting: find a video already performing well in your niche, drop it in, and Pippit rebuilds the pacing, mood, and structure around your product. You skip the guessing game entirely.
Steps:
Go to Pippit and create a free account
Upload your product screenshots or paste your product URL directly (it pulls assets automatically)
To start from scratch: describe the vibe and mood you want, and let it generate
To use the reference feature: find a video on TikTok or Instagram that matches the aesthetic you're after, drop it in as a reference, and add your own assets
Pippit rebuilds the creative direction around your product, keeping the hooks and pacing from the reference
Export your video and images, then schedule and publish directly from Pippit's built-in publisher
What you end up with: A full set of launch-ready social assets, video and images, that look like a studio made them. No editor needed. No designer needed. Just your product and a clear idea of the vibe you want.
Full tutorial:
TOOL OF THE DAY
Your agents can now edit your videos.
Tella just launched an MCP that lets any agent, Claude, Cursor, whatever you're running, actually reach into your video library and do work. Fetch transcripts, export and publish videos, build custom editing workflows. If you're recording anything regularly, demos, updates, tutorials, this turns the tedious stuff into something you can just hand off.
Stop editing. Start delegating.





