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throwawayk7h 19 hours ago [-]
If fable 5 can't do code... what are people using it for?
xg15 18 hours ago [-]
Was wondering the same. So coding, debugging and anything that has to do with cybersecurity or LLM development is blocked. What tasks are left in which Fable 5 is meaningfully better than the predecessors?
exabrial 18 hours ago [-]
It's beginning to look like giant publicity stunts. A model that can't do what it says it can, overhyped, no way to test.
dude250711 18 hours ago [-]
It's good for pre-IPO PR.
You drop a good old "A new {cool_word}-class model.".
And boom! What are you competitors going to do? Use same classification nomenclature? I don't think so! IPO secured.
sriramgopalan 20 hours ago [-]
How can it be legal to charge a higher fee for the Fable model, if most of the usage will default to a cheaper model behind the scenes?
It is one thing if I, as the user, choose to down-level but Claude shouldn't do this on its own.
mnmx6t 19 hours ago [-]
Judging from their site, I think it should be OK:
"You won't be charged Fable prices for rerouted requests. Learn more about how the fallback experience works."
This has no mention of what happens to the prompt cache, including the "learn more" link.
Knowing Anthropic, it wouldn't surprise me if it will result in a full cache miss/rewrite at fallback, with potentially up to 1M tokens in the context window.
Fable requests that fall back to Opus do not charge the cache miss cost of Opus.
bel8 18 hours ago [-]
And what happens if you also get blocked by Opus?
I couldn't find if they refund the tokens for that session or the customer is SOL.
gck1 18 hours ago [-]
You're paying in full for the "guardrails" embedded in the system prompt, prompt injections, refusals, fallbacks and everything else that may be caused by the service provider.
This is the new normal.
Salgat 14 hours ago [-]
Using only Fable, if I do /usage it will show both Fable and Opus usage, so I don't think it's charging Fable prices for Opus code gen.
rcr-anti 20 hours ago [-]
Originally at least the switch wasn't silent and whether to halt or auto switch was a setting in Claude Code.
cyanydeez 19 hours ago [-]
because it's all indistinguishable from magic when it's a cloud SaaS.
Not like you can tell the difference if you dont own any of the implementation.
simianwords 20 hours ago [-]
They are transparent. Don’t use it if you don’t want to. These things shouldn’t be illegal.
karahime 19 hours ago [-]
I agree that it shouldn't be outright illegal, but I will definitely be making the personal choice not to engage with model providers which do this. There's no amount of impressive results that could make me want to secretly pay more for less.
ath3nd 19 hours ago [-]
[dead]
mnmx6t 19 hours ago [-]
I must admit I was drawn to Claude because of their (obviously successful with me) publicity stunt about "being too dangerous to make widely available", when Mythos came out.
It's a shame because I was really looking forward to use it specifically to find potential security holes in my own software.
That being said, Opus 4.7/4.8 have been quite useful already, especially for finding things in the harder to test, non-happy paths.
If I recall, Fable 5 is supposed to be basically Mythos which falls back to Opus 4.8 when dealing with cybersecurity. I wonder if that also includes "finding bugs that could lead to security exploits".
babelfish 19 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I was very excited for Fable to come back to use it for work after using Opus 4.8, but now I guess I'm just excited for Sol/Terra/Luna (unless they have the same restrictions)
gck1 17 hours ago [-]
It's very likely that OAI models will have even more restrictions. Firstly because now they know what feds will do if you don't tune the safety classifiers towards more false positives and secondly, OAI models were always more restrictive than ANT.
tapvt 18 hours ago [-]
Is Opus 4.8 equally or more capabale for the actual mechanics of the coding work?
It seems to me that having a powerful Fable layer for the planning, coordination, orchestration-type work and delegating to a suitable model for the actual execution of "coding tasks" is perfectly appropriate, if that is the case.
jimrandomh 15 hours ago [-]
This is a misinterpretation. Fable 5's acceptable use policy has false positives during some coding tasks, and that's what they were talking about. But I've been using it for web dev tasks since it relaunched today, and it's worked fine without fallback.
(On a firmware-customization project involving a ghidra MCP, it triggered and switched to Opus; that was sort of expected.)
jascha_eng 18 hours ago [-]
Can't wait for China to pull ahead so we have an end to this bullshit
Kim_Bruning 17 hours ago [-]
This is a testable claim.
Gave it a small coding challenge. It wrote the code just fine.
0xy 16 hours ago [-]
Fable is useless, then. What's the point of re-enabling it exactly?
That aside, they said "some routine tasks like coding and debugging". Since I'm using it for coding right now and it's notably better than Opus 4.8, I think what they mean is that some coding and debugging tasks will fall back.
andai 12 hours ago [-]
How's it different from Opus in your experience?
LoganDark 18 minutes ago [-]
Fable is a lot more confident making decisions for me. Opus tends to create hacky workarounds rather than thinking through the architecture. The difference is so great that when Fable was withdrawn last month I just stopped using Claude, just because I did not want to go back to Opus.
One of my first experiences with Fable was giving it an Opus task and watching it work for more than twice the typical time that Opus works and complete the task to a much higher standard of quality than Opus ever did. That was enough to solidify how much better it is already, but I just keep seeing the difference in everything I do with it.
You drop a good old "A new {cool_word}-class model.".
And boom! What are you competitors going to do? Use same classification nomenclature? I don't think so! IPO secured.
It is one thing if I, as the user, choose to down-level but Claude shouldn't do this on its own.
"You won't be charged Fable prices for rerouted requests. Learn more about how the fallback experience works."
https://www.anthropic.com/claude/fable Under "Safeguards"
Knowing Anthropic, it wouldn't surprise me if it will result in a full cache miss/rewrite at fallback, with potentially up to 1M tokens in the context window.
Fable requests that fall back to Opus do not charge the cache miss cost of Opus.
I couldn't find if they refund the tokens for that session or the customer is SOL.
This is the new normal.
Not like you can tell the difference if you dont own any of the implementation.
It's a shame because I was really looking forward to use it specifically to find potential security holes in my own software.
That being said, Opus 4.7/4.8 have been quite useful already, especially for finding things in the harder to test, non-happy paths.
If I recall, Fable 5 is supposed to be basically Mythos which falls back to Opus 4.8 when dealing with cybersecurity. I wonder if that also includes "finding bugs that could lead to security exploits".
It seems to me that having a powerful Fable layer for the planning, coordination, orchestration-type work and delegating to a suitable model for the actual execution of "coding tasks" is perfectly appropriate, if that is the case.
(On a firmware-customization project involving a ghidra MCP, it triggered and switched to Opus; that was sort of expected.)
Gave it a small coding challenge. It wrote the code just fine.
That aside, they said "some routine tasks like coding and debugging". Since I'm using it for coding right now and it's notably better than Opus 4.8, I think what they mean is that some coding and debugging tasks will fall back.
One of my first experiences with Fable was giving it an Opus task and watching it work for more than twice the typical time that Opus works and complete the task to a much higher standard of quality than Opus ever did. That was enough to solidify how much better it is already, but I just keep seeing the difference in everything I do with it.