A reader left a comment on the April 13 post calling the NIST announcement “the other shoe.”
That’s right. Here it is.
- April 7: Anthropic announces Mythos Preview and Project Glasswing.
- April 15: NIST announces at VulnCon26 that it will enrich only KEV-listed CVEs, federal-use software, and EO 14028 critical software. Everything else moves to “Lowest Priority, not scheduled.” The pre-March 2026 backlog is deprioritized en masse.
One week. Eight days, if you must. Two announcements. One result.
The discovery pipeline was expanded while the triage pipeline was contracted. All in a week.
NIST in Retreat
NIST’s calculus since forever has been volume, and what to do about it. CVE submissions grew 263% from 2020 to 2025. Q1 2026 ran roughly a third ahead of Q1 2025. The NVD enrichment backlog became unmanageable on existing resources and the agency has said so.
HelpNet Security covered the VulnCon26 announcement by saying LLM-driven vulnerability discovery, including Anthropic and OpenAI’s security-focused programs, are a reason the submission flood will only grow. Any mainstream security publication would say the same. It’s just stating the obvious. Slop machines aren’t going to reduce submissions, and they include more signal as well as a LOT more noise.
The practical consequence of the NIST decision is worth calling out specifically. A CVE number no longer comes with enrichment by default.
That means our beloved, tried and true CVSS scores, CWE classification, CPE mappings, exploitability metadata are now a scarce resource allocated by priority tier. KEV gets enrichment. Federal-use software gets enrichment. Everything else gets a number, a timestamp and a “please wait” position that reads “not scheduled because….”
Indeed. Because why?
I said it April 13
The April 13 piece made the evidence case against Mythos. It wasn’t hard, it just took time to read the two hundred pages of absolutely useless reporting of fluff to find the seven pages of actual security text. I had to wade past the 20MB of completely unnecessary PDF file size, to get to the 1 or 2MB that had something worth downloading.
Call it foreshadowing of what Anthropic is probably going to be doing to vulnerability reporting.
The April 15 piece then went a bit deeper: Anthropic broke every established disclosure norm and inserted itself as a de facto clearance-granting body for vulnerability knowledge. The companies who willingly go along with Glasswing get early access, first-patch timing, and the ability to shape disclosure timelines on their own products.
What these two posts lacked is the public side of the move. NIST’s April 15 announcement is the vulnerability standard disclosure regime visibly retreating from the space that Anthropic is bumbling and stumbling into.
The April 13 post argued Anthropic was constructing a parallel disclosure regime to the one that should be expected to evolve. It turns out the public regime was under threat, in the same week, on the same subject.
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Privatization of Vuln Enrichment
KEV listing is no longer just a patching priority signal. It is now the gate for NVD enrichment. Which means the question of whether a finding lands in KEV carries a new economic weight it did not carry two weeks ago.
Those inside the Glasswing rope get early access to Mythos findings. They get first-patch timing. They are suddenly, by corporate position, best placed to coordinate with CISA on whether a finding meets KEV criteria. The vendor funds the consortium and then that consortium shapes the disclosure. The disclosure shapes KEV eligibility. KEV eligibility now determines whether a CVE gets the metadata that makes it actionable to the rest of the industry.
The poor, lowly bastards left outside the Glasswing palace, get to put on a hat that says “not scheduled.”
The April 15 post also tried to answer the question whether Glasswing is a cartel. The NIST decision makes that answer easier.
A cartel extracts value by controlling a scarce resource. Before April 15, NVD enrichment was a public good, slow and imperfect, but at least it was universal. After April 15, enrichment is a tiered resource. The tier boundaries will not come from the security community. They will be set by whoever controls the volume. Right now that includes Anthropic, which is named as one of the accelerants driving it. Anthropic’s consortium has been positioned to directly benefit from the scarcity it causes.
That sequence only requires the incentives line up and the institutions respond predictably to the pressure to go along with it.
They did. Because they aren’t the security industry.




