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Palo Alto Networks Found 7 Years of Vulnerabilities in 6 Weeks Using Mythos

All-In Podcast · Nikesh Arora: Mythos is Real, Analytical SaaS is Dead, and Google can be a $10T company · June 8, 2026
Palo Alto Networks Found 7 Years of Vulnerabilities in 6 Weeks Using Mythos
All-In Podcast
All-In Podcast
Nikesh Arora: Mythos is Real, Analytical SaaS is Dead, and Google can be a $10T company
"In 6 weeks, we found vulnerabilities which would have normally taken us 5 to 7 years to find. Mythos was not oversold. It was legit. The capabilities of AI in being able to assess vulnerabilities in code are real."
Nikesh Arora revealed that Palo Alto Networks used OpenAI's Mythos model to discover code vulnerabilities at an unprecedented pace, compressing what would have been years of security auditing into weeks. Arora emphasized this capability will soon be available in open source models within 3 months, creating a race between cyber defenders and attackers. The revelation underscores the dual-use nature of advanced AI and the urgency facing enterprises to patch their systems before adversaries exploit the same technology.

About this episode

On this episode of the All-In Podcast, hosts Jason Calacanis, Chamath Palihapitiya, and David Friedberg interviewed Nikesh Arora, CEO of Palo Alto Networks, for a deep dive into AI's impact on cybersecurity, enterprise software, and the future of business infrastructure. Arora, whose company has grown from $17 billion to $238 billion in market cap over his 8-year tenure, delivered several bombshell revelations about the state of AI security and the SaaS industry. Most notably, he disclosed that Palo Alto used OpenAI's Mythos model to discover code vulnerabilities in 6 weeks that would have taken 5 to 7 years using traditional methods, but warned the model had a 30% false positive rate. He predicted Mythos-level capabilities will be available in open source within 3 months, creating an urgent race between cyber defenders and attackers. Arora declared analytical SaaS companies "over," arguing AI eliminates the need for third-party data analysis tools, and predicted entire categories of enterprise software will be re-engineered over the next 5 years as agents replace user interfaces. He emphasized that infrastructure software companies like Databricks, Snowflake, and MongoDB are undervalued because enterprises will need to store 10 times more data in the next 3 years. Arora also made a bold prediction that Google will become the first $10 trillion company despite being underrated due to its conglomerate structure. The conversation covered AI's asymmetric advantage for cyber attackers, the false positive problem plaguing defensive AI applications, why 89% of breaches stem from stolen credentials rather than sophisticated attacks, and Arora's thesis that profit pools are shifting from models to applications. He discussed Palo Alto's $25 billion acquisition strategy focused on identity security and his contrarian view that AI will increase rather than decrease technical headcount at leading companies. The episode provided a rare insider perspective from a CEO with deep experience at Google, SoftBank, and now one of the world's largest cybersecurity firms.

Key takeaways

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