The Event Worth Examining
This week, the Trump administration concluded negotiations with Anthropic to permit the release of Mythos, the company's most advanced AI model, to a select group of U.S. companies and government agencies. The arrangement is notable not for what it delivers but for what it withholds. Access is restricted, curated, and contingent on political negotiation. This is not a product launch. It is a coordination mechanism, and it deserves to be analyzed as one.
Selective Access as Structural Constraint
The Mythos situation instantiates something that classical coordination theory has difficulty describing. Markets distribute resources through price signals; hierarchies distribute them through authority; networks distribute them through trust and reciprocity. The Mythos arrangement does something different. It distributes capability through politically negotiated gatekeeping, where access is neither purchased nor earned through demonstrated competence. The organizations that receive access are not necessarily the most prepared to use the model effectively. They are the most politically proximate.
This matters for organizational theory because it decouples access from competence in a structural, not incidental, way. Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin (2020) argued that algorithmic systems at work create new forms of control by making performance visible while obscuring the rules governing that performance. The Mythos arrangement extends this logic upward from the individual worker to the organizational level. The rules governing access are not transparent, and the competencies required to navigate the access regime are distinct from the competencies required to use the model itself.
Two Different Competence Problems
Organizations receiving Mythos access face two problems that are easy to conflate but structurally distinct. The first is the competence problem: can their teams deploy an advanced AI model in ways that produce organizational value? The second is the access maintenance problem: can they sustain the political and regulatory relationships that preserve their access? These are not the same problem, and training for one does not prepare organizations for the other.
The awareness-capability gap I work with in my dissertation research usually describes individuals who know an algorithm exists but cannot translate that awareness into improved performance (Gagrain, Naab, and Grub, 2024). The Mythos case suggests an organizational analog. Firms that receive access may develop acute awareness of the regulatory environment surrounding the model without developing any real structural understanding of how the model generates value. They know the shape of the constraint without understanding what to do inside it. This is the topology-topography distinction applied to governance rather than platform performance.
The Folk Theory Problem at the Organizational Level
Gentner's (1983) structure-mapping theory distinguishes between surface-level feature matching and deeper relational structure transfer. Organizations that received early access to models like GPT-4 or Claude through enterprise agreements developed folk theories of AI deployment: collections of impressions about what worked in their specific context, at a specific moment, under specific conditions. Those folk theories are now being exported to the Mythos deployment context with no guarantee that the structural conditions transfer.
Sundar (2020) described how machine agency creates new attribution challenges for human users, who tend to apply human-interaction schemas to AI outputs in ways that systematically misread what the system is doing. The problem is compounded here because the organizations receiving Mythos access are not just misreading the model. They are potentially misreading the governance regime that controls the model, treating a politically contingent arrangement as if it were a stable infrastructure.
What the Domo Case Adds
The simultaneous collapse of Domo - from a $2.8 billion valuation to a company fighting for survival - is relevant context here. Domo's decline reflects what happens when an organization builds its coordination logic around a platform architecture that AI agents have begun to circumvent. The firm developed deep routine expertise in a specific data visualization and business intelligence topology. When that topology shifted, the expertise did not transfer (Hatano and Inagaki, 1986). The Mythos recipients risk a parallel failure: building organizational routines around access conditions that are politically contingent and therefore structurally unstable.
The Coordination Question No One Is Asking
The coverage of the Mythos release has focused almost entirely on capability: what can the model do, how does it compare to GPT-4o and Gemini Ultra. That framing misses the more important organizational question. The capability of the model is, for practical purposes, a solved problem at the frontier level. The unsolved problem is the coordination mechanism that determines which organizations can deploy that capability, under what conditions, and with what governance overhead. Until that mechanism is transparent and stable, the variance in outcomes across Mythos-enabled organizations will be driven less by technical competence than by political positioning. That is not a technology story. It is a coordination story, and it is the one worth tracking.
Roger Hunt