The Trump administration's decision to permit Anthropic to release its Mythos model to a select group of U.S. companies and government agencies is not primarily a story about AI capability or geopolitical strategy. It is a story about how artificially constrained access creates structured variance in organizational outcomes before a single prompt is ever written. The policy mechanism here - a negotiated whitelist of approved organizations - encodes differential competence opportunity directly into the distribution architecture of the technology itself.
Access Is Not the Variable That Explains Outcomes
The instinct in most commentary on selective AI rollouts is to treat access as the key resource being allocated. If your organization is on the approved list, you gain an advantage. If not, you are behind. This framing is analytically weak. Research on platform labor has shown repeatedly that workers with identical access to the same tools produce dramatically different outcomes, and the variance cannot be attributed to the tools themselves (Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin, 2020). The same structural logic applies here. The organizations granted access to Mythos are not receiving a uniform benefit. They are being placed inside an environment where their ability to develop coordinating competencies will diverge almost immediately, based on factors that have nothing to do with the access grant itself.
This is what makes the Anthropic case theoretically interesting. The administration has created a bounded experimental population: a small set of organizations with identical formal access to a frontier model, operating under similar regulatory constraints, and yet almost certainly headed toward power-law distributed outcomes. The question worth asking is not who got access. The question is what determines who actually learns to use it well.
The Whitelist as a Folk Theory Generator
Selective rollouts of this kind tend to produce a specific cognitive pathology inside approved organizations. Inclusion on the whitelist gets interpreted as a signal of organizational capability rather than as what it actually is: a political and logistical sorting decision made under negotiation pressure. Organizations begin to construct internal narratives around their approved status - folk theories, in the sense Gagrain, Naab, and Grub (2024) use the term - that substitute for genuine structural understanding of what the technology does and how it coordinates work. The belief that "we were selected because we are ready" displaces the harder work of actually developing readiness.
This is the awareness-capability gap operating at the organizational level rather than the individual one. Awareness of having access, and awareness of being officially sanctioned, creates a confidence in competence that the underlying organizational schema does not yet support. The firms most at risk are not the ones excluded from the rollout. They are the ones included in it who mistake the invitation for the preparation.
Two Organizations, One Model
A recent piece circulating in management commentary describes what it calls the two-organizations problem: the gap between the organization that exists on paper and the one employees actually experience. This framing applies with particular force to AI integration efforts. The formal organization approves access, assigns a working group, and updates its AI policy documentation. The experienced organization is a set of individual workers developing uncoordinated, locally-generated strategies for interacting with a system whose structural logic they have not been trained to understand.
Rahman (2021) describes a version of this dynamic in gig platform contexts, where workers operate inside systems whose constraint architecture is largely invisible to them. The difference in the Mythos case is that the invisibility is institutional rather than individual. The organization itself may not have a coherent schema for what it is integrating, which means the folk theories that fill that gap will be generated bottom-up, inconsistently, and without any mechanism for correction. The policy decision to restrict access does nothing to address this. It simply concentrates the problem inside a smaller population.
What Selective Access Actually Tests
From a coordination theory perspective, the Mythos rollout is an inadvertent natural experiment. Anthropic and the administration have created a bounded group of organizations with formally equivalent access to an advanced AI system, operating under a shared constraint structure imposed by the approval process. What varies across those organizations is the quality of their internal schema for understanding what algorithmic coordination requires. Hatano and Inagaki (1986) distinguish between routine expertise, which is procedural and context-bound, and adaptive expertise, which is principled and transfers across novel conditions. The organizations that develop adaptive expertise with Mythos will be the ones that treat the tool as a coordination environment requiring structural understanding, not a capability upgrade requiring only deployment.
The whitelist tells us nothing about which category any given organization falls into. That determination will happen quietly, inside individual teams, over the next several months. The access decision is the least interesting part of this story.
References
Gagrain, A., Naab, T., and Grub, J. (2024). Algorithmic media use and algorithm literacy. New Media and Society.
Hatano, G., and Inagaki, K. (1986). Two courses of expertise. In H. Stevenson, H. Azuma, and K. Hakuta (Eds.), Child development and education in Japan. Freeman.
Kellogg, K. C., Valentine, M. A., and Christin, A. (2020). Algorithms at work: The new contested terrain of control. Academy of Management Annals, 14(1), 366-410.
Rahman, H. A. (2021). The invisible cage: Workers' reactivity to opaque algorithmic evaluations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 66(4), 945-988.
Roger Hunt