On Thursday, Anthropic released Opus 4.8, the latest version of its most advanced publishing model. This model is available everywhere at the same standard price as previous Opus releases.
The new model was released just 41 days after Opus 4.7 was released, a much faster upgrade cycle than Anthropic’s usual. (The latest Sonnet and Haiku models are three and seven months old, respectively.) This quick response may have something to do with the lukewarm response to Opus 4.7, which some users found disappointing.
During this time, there have also been significant new releases of OpenAI’s Codex and Google’s Gemini Flash models, increasing pressure on Anthropic.
Opus 4.8 includes the expected best-in-class benchmark results, but special attention has also been paid to how the model manages bad or uncertain data. In a published article, Anthropic’s early testers found that the new model was “more likely to flag operational uncertainties and less likely to make unsubstantiated claims.”
Reflecting this, Bridgewater employee testimonials say that the biggest difference in the upgrade is that “Opus 4.8 tends to aggressively flag problems with analysis inputs and outputs that other models routinely miss and leave for the user to figure out.”
Along with the new model, Anthropic has launched a feature called Dynamic Workflow. This will be available in Research Preview. The system is designed to allow large models like Opus to manage complex tasks across hundreds of parallel subagents.
“Claude Code and Opus 4.8 can now perform codebase-scale migrations across hundreds of thousands of lines of code, from kickoff to merge, using existing test suites as a bar,” the post explains.
Anthropic is still putting its cutting-edge Mythos model on hold after a preliminary preview last month raised cybersecurity concerns. However, the company hinted in today’s Opus release that Mythos’ preview period may end soon once the necessary safety measures are completed.
“We are moving quickly to develop these safety measures and expect to have Mythos-class models available to all customers in the coming weeks,” the company wrote.
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