
Infosys, TCS, and India’s cybersecurity agency CERT-In are actively testing critical banking and government systems for vulnerabilities linked to Anthropic’s powerful new AI model, Mythos. The focus is on securing platforms like Infosys’s Finacle banking software, Aadhaar, and government login systems before Mythos becomes widely accessible.
- Infosys: Testing and patching its Finacle banking software, widely used by banks globally.
- TCS: Running secure audits on government and financial systems, including India’s passport platform.
- CERT-In: Stress-testing Aadhaar and government login systems for AI-driven cyberattack risks.
- Anthropic Mythos: A next-gen AI capable of autonomously detecting software flaws across major systems.
India’s proactive testing shows recognition of the AI-cybersecurity arms race. The question now is whether India will gain controlled access to Mythos to strengthen defenses—or face risks from adversaries who exploit it first.
| System | Entity Testing | Risk Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Finacle banking software | Infosys | Hidden flaws in global banking platforms |
| Passport system | TCS | Identity & travel document security |
| Aadhaar national ID | CERT-In | Citizen data protection |
| Gov login systems | CERT-In | Authentication & access control |
Risks & Concerns
- Lower barrier for attackers: Mythos could allow less-skilled actors to exploit critical flaws.
- Financial exposure: Banking systems like Finacle are used internationally, meaning vulnerabilities could ripple globally.
- Civilian data risk: Aadhaar and government login systems hold sensitive citizen information, making them prime targets.

















IndianWeb2.com is an independent digital media platform for business, entrepreneurship, science, technology, startups, gadgets and climate change news & reviews.