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Here's what that Claude Code source leak reveals about Anthropic's plans

Yesterday’s surprise leak of the source code for Anthropic’s Claude Code revealed a lot about the vibe-coding scaffolding the company has built around its proprietary Claude model. But observers digging through over 512,000 lines of code across more than 2,000 files have also discovered references to disabled, hidden, or inactive features that provide a peek into the potential roadmap for future features.

Emerging The topic has initial corroboration, but the newsroom is still waiting on stronger confirmation.
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Yesterday’s surprise leak of the source code for Anthropic’s Claude Code revealed a lot about the vibe-coding scaffolding the company has built around its proprietary Claude model. But observers digging through over 512,000 lines of code across more than 2,000 files have also discovered references to disabled, hidden, or inactive features that provide a peek into the potential roadmap for future features.

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What happened

Yesterday’s surprise leak of the source code for Anthropic’s Claude Code revealed a lot about the vibe-coding scaffolding the company has built around its proprietary Claude model. But observers digging through over 512,000 lines of code across more than 2,000 files have also discovered references to disabled, hidden, or inactive features that provide a peek into the potential roadmap for future features.

Why it matters

Chief among these features is Kairos , a persistent daemon that can operate in the background even when the Claude Code terminal window is closed. The system would use periodic “ ” prompts to regularly review whether new actions are needed and a “PROACTIVE” flag for “surfacing something the user hasn’t asked for and needs to see now.”.

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What to watch next

Kairos makes use of a file-based “memory system” designed to allow for persistent operation across user sessions. A prompt hidden behind a disabled “KAIROS” flag in the code explains that the system is designed to “have a complete picture of who the user is, how they’d like to collaborate with you, what behaviors to avoid or repeat, and the context behind the work the user gives you.”.

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