# 中国网络安全公司360推出AI工具对抗Mythos，周鸿祎呼吁建立网络核威慑

- 来源：The Decoder：AI News（RSS）
- 作者：Matthias Bastian
- 发布时间：2026-06-28 17:30
- AIHOT 分数：46
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmqxlmc1i00aqslxptgduyoha
- 原文链接：https://the-decoder.com/chinese-cybersecurity-firm-builds-ai-tools-to-rival-mythos-and-frames-the-race-as-cyber-nuclear-deterrence

## AI 摘要

中国网络安全公司360安全科技发布两款AI工具：“屠龙锋”用于自动化漏洞挖掘，“倚天镇”用于自动化网络防御。创始人周鸿祎称“屠龙锋”已发现3432个漏洞。他认为中国顶级AI模型仍落后西方20%-30%，因此采用基于智能体的方法将模型与安全专业知识及自动化工具结合。周鸿祎将Mythos类模型比作“AI时代的网络核武器”，呼吁中国建立对等战略威慑能力，避免美国垄断。清华大学教授唐杰（Z.ai创始人，近期发布GLM-5.2）预测中国“类Mythos”模型将在2027年第一季度前出现。

## 正文

Chinese cybersecurity firm builds AI tools to rival Mythos and frames the race as cyber-nuclear deterrence

Matthias Bastian View the LinkedIn Profile of Matthias Bastian

Jun 28, 2026

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Key Points

Chinese cybersecurity company 360 Security Technology has unveiled two AI tools for automated vulnerability hunting and cyber defense, pitched as China's answer to Anthropic's Mythos.

Founder Zhou Hongyi says China's top AI models still trail Western systems by 20 to 30 percent. To close the gap, 360 uses an agent-based approach that pairs models with security expertise and automated tools.

Zhou compares advanced AI vulnerability models to cyber weapons of mass destruction and calls for China to build an equivalent strategic deterrent rather than let the U.S. hold a monopoly.

Chinese cybersecurity company Qihoo 360 Security Technology says it has built two AI tools to rival Anthropic's Mythos. The rhetoric sounds like it was pulled straight from the Cold War.

Qihoo 360 founder Zhou Hongyi showed off the tools at a conference in Beijing. "Tu Long Feng" automatically hunts for vulnerabilities, while "Yi Tian Zhen" automates cyber defense. Tu Long Feng has already flagged 3,432 vulnerabilities, Zhou said.

Zhou puts the gap between top Chinese models and the most capable Western ones at 20 to 30 percent. 360 tries to make up for that with an agent-based approach that pairs models with security expertise and automated tools. "China cannot wait until model capabilities have fully caught up before beginning vulnerability discovery. We cannot afford to wait," Zhou said.

Separately, Jie Tang, a Tsinghua University professor who founded Z.ai and recently shipped the well-received GLM-5.2 model, estimated that a Chinese "Mythos" class model would arrive before Q1 2027.

Zhou frames AI vulnerability hunting as a nuclear deterrence problem

Without independent tests and benchmarks like those OpenAI and Anthropic provide, there's no way to verify Zhou's claims. But the rhetoric itself is worth paying attention to.

In his speech, Zhou went straight for the nuclear comparison. He called Mythos's ability to find vulnerabilities and build attack chains on its own the equivalent of "cyber-nuclear weapons of the AI era."

"Why has there never been a real nuclear war? Because both sides had nuclear weapons and deterred each other. The same is true in cybersecurity," he said. China needs an "equivalent strategic deterrent capability." A weapon "that can shift the entire balance of attack and defense must not be left solely in the hands of others."

Zhou warned against "one-sided transparency," too. The U.S. could use Mythos to scan Chinese systems for vulnerabilities while China stays blind. "With Mythos, it becomes a situation where the enemy is fast and we are slow, the enemy is many and we are few. You are still relying on a few security experts for analysis, while the other side has already replicated a group of hacker agents to work simultaneously."

He pointed to the export ban on Anthropic's Fable 5 as proof. Fable 5 is the "civilian, neutered version of Mythos," and if someone jailbroke it, the whole world could potentially tap into Mythos-level capabilities. "This is what the U.S. government finds most intolerable. It must ensure that it alone possesses this capability, forming an absolute monopoly over this strategic asset," Zhou said.

The U.S. government uses the same national security argument to justify its own export controls on chips and Mythos. Both sides have spent years trading accusations over cyberattacks on critical infrastructure. It's the Cold War playbook, just applied to AI. One side builds a capability; the other says it can't afford to fall behind.

Even the names of 360's tools carry a whiff of war romanticism, likely referencing a classic Chinese martial arts novel where legendary weapons grant their owners supremacy.

Note: The Chinese transcript was translated using AI, and the excerpts were verified for accuracy using three additional AI systems.
