Anthropic's newly unveiled "Glasswing" initiative is assembling a formidable coalition of major U.S. tech and cybersecurity firms, potentially reshaping global cybersecurity governance and raising questions about Europe's strategic role.
The project aims to establish a common framework for securing software across the digital ecosystem. Its founding members include cloud and AI infrastructure giants Amazon Web Services, Google, Microsoft, and NVIDIA, alongside device and OS leader Apple. They are joined by major cybersecurity players Cisco, CrowdStrike, and Palo Alto Networks.
This concentration of market-leading American companies positions the coalition to set de facto technical standards and security practices with global reach. The notable absence of any major European corporations or institutions from the founding group highlights a significant transatlantic divide. It suggests a future where the foundational rules for digital security could be architected primarily by U.S. commercial entities, with other regions adopting rather than co-creating these standards.
The initiative underscores a broader trend of private sector leadership in defining critical infrastructure security, moving beyond traditional government-led or multilateral models. For Europe, Glasswing presents a strategic challenge: it must either accelerate its own coordinated efforts in digital sovereignty and cybersecurity innovation or risk ceding influence over the protocols that will secure the global digital economy.