Claude Opus 4.7 Model Card

(anthropic.com)

100 points | by adocomplete 3 hours ago ago

46 comments

  • bachittle an hour ago

    So Opus 4.7 is measurably worse at long-context retrieval compared to Opus 4.6. Opus 4.6 scores 91.9% and Opus 4.7 scores 59.2%. At least they're transparent about the model degradation. They traded long-context retrieval for better software engineering and math scores.

    • film42 an hour ago

      To be honest, I think it's just a more honest score of what Opus 4.6 actually was. Once contexts get sufficiently large, Opus develops pretty bad short term memory loss.

    • freedomben an hour ago

      Agreed, I appreciate the transparency (and Anthropic isn't normally very transparent). It's also great to know because I will change how I approach long contexts knowing it struggles more with them.

      • RobinL an hour ago

        Could this be because they've found the 1m context uneconomical (ie costs too much to serve, or burns through users quota too quickly causing complaints), and so they're no longer targeting it as a goal

        • Someone1234 12 minutes ago

          Opus 4.7 is also worse at 256K context. Go look at page 195 and page 196. It is across the board regression, not just 1M context.

    • jzig an hour ago

      At what point along the 1M window does context become "long" enough that this degradation occurs?

      • daemonologist 34 minutes ago

        The benchmark GP mentioned is measuring at 128k-256k context (there's another at 524k-1024k, where 4.6 scored 78.3% and 4.7 scored 32.2%).

        The longer the context the worse the performance; there isn't really a qualitative step change in capability (if there is imo it happens at like 8k-16k tokens, much sooner than is relevant for multi-turn coding tasks - see e.g. this old benchmark https://github.com/adobe-research/NoLiMa ).

  • kube-system 22 minutes ago

    > Chemical and biological weapons threat model 2 (CB-2): Novel chemical/biological weapons production capabilities. A model has CB-2 capabilities if it has the ability to significantly help threat actors (for example, moderately resourced expert-backed teams) create/obtain and deploy chemical and/or biological weapons with potential for catastrophic damages far beyond those of past catastrophes such as COVID-19.

    That's an interesting choice of benchmark for measuring the risk of "Chemical and biological weapons"

  • koehr 2 hours ago

    This reads more like an advertisement for Mythos, on the first glance

    • ModernMech 40 minutes ago

      That's why I don't like these "model cards" being presented as if they are some sort of technical document -- they're marketing materials.

  • aliljet 2 hours ago

    Have they effectively communicated what a 20x or 10x Claude subscription actually means? And with Claude 4.7 increasing usage by 1.35x does that mean a 20x plan is now really a 13x plan (no token increase on the subscription) or a 27x plan (more tokens given to compensate for more computer cost) relative to Claude Opus 4.6?

    • computomatic 2 hours ago

      They have communicated it as 5x is 5 x Pro, and 20x is 20 x Pro (I haven’t looked lately so not sure if that’s changed).

      They have also repeatedly communicated that the base unit (Pro allotment) is subject to change and does change often.

      As far as I can tell, that implies there is no guarantee that those subscriptions get some specific number of tokens per unit of time. It’s not a claim they make.

    • ModernMech 9 minutes ago

      Feels like buying toilet paper.

    • DonsDiscountGas an hour ago

      Definitely 13x, at least for now

  • Symmetry 2 hours ago

    > The technical error that caused accidental chain-of-thought supervision in some prior models (including Mythos Preview) was also present during the training of Claude Opus 4.7, affecting 7.8% of episodes.

    >_>

  • STRiDEX 2 hours ago

    Dumb question but why are chemical weapons always addressed as a risk with llms? Is the idea that they contain how to make chemical weapons or that they would guide someone on how?

    Would there not already be websites that contain that information? How is an llm different, i guess, from some sort of anarchist cookbook thing.

    • Philpax 2 hours ago

      Both. There's the risk of them instructing a user on how to produce a known formulation (the Anarchist Cookbook solution, as you say), which is irritating but not that problematic.

      The bigger issue is that they are potentially capable of producing novel formulations capable of producing harm, and guiding someone through this process. That is, consider a world in which someone with malicious desires has access to a model as capable at chemistry / biology as Mythos is at offensive cybersecurity abilities.

      This is obviously limited by the fact that the models don't operate in the physical world, but there's plenty of written material out there.

      • rogerrogerr 2 hours ago

        The world has been blessed by two connected things:

        1. Smart people have economic opportunities that align them away from being evil

        2. People who are evil tend not to be smart.

        We're breaking both of these assumptions.

        • chrisweekly an hour ago

          "Smart people have economic opportunities that align them away from being evil"

          For some definition of evil, some of the time, ok. But as economic opportunities compound (looking at the behavior of the ultra-rich), it seems there's at least strong correlation in the other direction, if not full-on "root of all evil" causation.

          • rogerrogerr an hour ago

            Sure, but that’s not “slaughter a stadium of people with drones” evil or “poison the water supply” evil or “take out unprotected electrical substations” evil.

            So much infrastructure is very soft because the evil people aren’t smart enough to conceive of or conduct an attack.

        • Der_Einzige 2 hours ago

          Good. This is how we will force the world to reckon with the isolated, the disgruntled, and "lone wolf" terrorist. Real "sigma males" actually exist, and when they decide "society has to pay" we are all worse off for it. If Ted Kaczynski (quintessential example of a real actual sigma) had been in his prime operating right now, he'd have mail-bombed NeurIPS and ICLR already. I'm not cool with being in crowds of AI professionals right now for physical security reasons given the extreme anti-AI sentiment that exists from nearly everyone outside of the valley: https://jonready.com/blog/posts/everyone-in-seattle-hates-ai...

        • malcolmgreaves 23 minutes ago

          That’s not quite true. Take a look at all the billionaires destroying society. Being evil is the surest way to get to get rich. In fact it’s the only way to amass that level of capital: there’s no ethical billionaire.

          • mikek 5 minutes ago

            This feels like a wild overgeneralization. People can become rich without resorting to evil methods, especially now with global markets and software. Case in point: Minecraft was wildly successful, and now Notch is a billionaire.

    • dcre an hour ago

      LLMs can tell you exactly how to acquire the materials and manufacture the materials. They might even come up with novel formulations that rely on substances that are easier to get. There might be information about this stuff online but LLMs are much better than random idiots at adapting that information to their actual situation.

      On top of LLMs reducing the cost/difficulty, the other reason biological and chemical weapons are such a worry is their asymmetric character — they are much much easier and cheaper to produce and deploy than they are to defend against.

    • rgbrenner 2 hours ago

      In the same way that all coding docs are available publicly

    • CodingJeebus 2 hours ago

      WAG but I wonder if a hijacked LLM could also assist with figuring out how to obtain required materials, not just provide the recipe.

  • il-b 2 hours ago

    Ironically, the website is down

  • joeumn 2 hours ago

    I'm actually surprised at how it performed compared to 4.6 and also compared to mythos. Will be fun to use.

  • bicepjai 3 hours ago

    This card is a 272 page report. So now we are redefining names :)

    • albert_e 2 hours ago

      Does the model card fit in the model's context :)

      • anonyfox 19 minutes ago

        well it will saturate your 5h limit window at least

  • NickNaraghi an hour ago

    232 pages is bullshit. Longer than the Mythos system card? What are you hiding.

  • 100ms 2 hours ago

        $ pbpaste | wc -w 
        62508
        $ pbpaste | grep -oi mythos|wc -w
        331
        $ pbpaste | grep -oi opus|wc -w
        809
  • jmward01 2 hours ago

    Haiku not getting an update is becoming telling. I suspect we are reaching a point where the low end models are cannibalizing high end and that isn't going to stop. How will these companies make money in a few years when even the smallest models are amazing?

    • blixt 2 hours ago

      Isn't it pretty common for the smaller models to release a little while after the bigger ones, for all the big model providers?

      • jmward01 2 hours ago

        The last update for Haiku was in October, or in startup land, 10 years ago.

    • mvkel 2 hours ago

      It seems to be a rule that older models are more expensive than newer ones. The low end models have higher $CPT and worse output. I wonder if the move is to just have one model and quantize if you hit compute constraints

      • deaux an hour ago

        > It seems to be a rule that older models are more expensive than newer ones.

        It isn't. Gemini has gotten more expensive with each release. Anthropic has stayed pretty similar over time, no? When is the last time OpenAI dropped API prices? OpenAI started very high because they were the first, so there was a ton of low hanging fruit and there was much room to drop.

    • dkhenry 2 hours ago

      The Gemma models are at this point. A 31B model that can fit on a consumer card is as good as Sonnet 4.5. I haven't put it through as much on the coding front or tool calling as I have the Claude or GPT models, but for text processing it is on par with the frontier models.

      • make3 2 hours ago

        absolutely not on par you're smoking

        • dkhenry an hour ago

          You make a compelling argument, but thankfully I have data to back up my anecdotal experience

          This comparison shows them neck and neck https://benchlm.ai/compare/claude-sonnet-4-5-vs-gemma-4-31b

          As Does this one https://llm-stats.com/models/compare/claude-sonnet-4-6-vs-ge...

          And the pelican benchmark even shows them pretty close https://simonwillison.net/2026/Apr/2/gemma-4/ https://simonwillison.net/2025/Sep/29/claude-sonnet-4-5/

          Also this isn't a fringe statement, you can see most people who have done an evaluation agree with me

          • jmward01 10 minutes ago

            I think one area I find hard to get around is context length. Everything self hosted is so limited on length that it is marginal to use. Additionally I think that the tools (like claude code) are clearly in the training mix for Anthropic's models so they seem to get a boost over other models pushed into that environment. That being said, open source and local inference is -really- good and only going to get better. There is no doubt that the current frontier biz model is not sustainable.

        • lostmsu 2 hours ago

          Just to be clear, did you notice the parent said 4.5?

          • cmorgan31 an hour ago

            They are also on par in a lot of classification tasks. I did have to actually use gemma4 and fine tune it a bit but that is part of the value add.

  • nothinkjustai an hour ago

    How much do you want to bet this is Mythos, and Anthropic released it as Opus to avoid embarrassment after all the hype they whipped up…

  • deflator an hour ago

    Model Welfare? Are they serious about this? Or is it just more hype? I really don't trust anything this company says anymore. "We have a model that is too dangerous to release" is like me saying that I have a billion dollars in gold that nobody is allowed to see but I expect to be able to borrow against it.