Abstract
Cryptocurrency market infrastructure—public blockchains and cross-chain bridges supporting tens of billions in liquidity—is monitored as a systemic-risk surface by the Financial Stability Board and equivalent bodies, with defensive posture calibrated against human-level adversaries. Anthropic’s April 2026 release of Claude Mythos Preview has prompted institutional response across financial regulation but no blockchain-specific analytical framework. This paper develops one by defining Mythos-class as a vendor-neutral capability profile: a set of frontier autonomous offensive capabilities specified independently of any single model or vendor (defined by five constituent capability primitives). The central analytical claim is friction inversion: the patch primitives, segmentation, vendor-coordinated disclosure, and credential rotation that constrain Mythos-class capability in conventional IT environments are structurally absent on-chain. This makes blockchain exposure positioned differently in kind, not degree, from enterprise IT. The paper instantiates this finding against Bitcoin and Ethereum/L2 architectures through analysis of four major bridge exploits totaling over $1.74 billion in losses. Vendor-neutral defensive and governance frameworks defined against the capability profile rather than any specific model release are the correct unit of analysis. On this basis the paper offers general recommendations for protocol governance, audit and verification cadence, and regulatory posture, developed as an analytical framework rather than as empirically validated risk estimates.
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