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> In spirit I think this is “open source”, and I think that’s how the majority of people think. No, it isn't. You do, but, as evidenced by other comments, there's clearly people that don't. Thinking that you're with the majority and it's just a vocal minority is one thing, but it could just as easily be said that the vocal groups objecting to your characterization are representative of the mainstream view. If we look at these models as the output of a compiler, that we don't have the inputs to, but that we are free (ish) to use and modify and redistribute, it's a nice grant from the copyright holder, but that very much doesn't look like open source. Open source, applied to AI models would mean giving us (a reference to) the dataset and the code used to train the model so we could tweak it to train the model slightly differently. To be less apologetic or something by default, instead of having to give it additional system instructions. Model Available(MA) is freer than Model unavailable, and it's more generous than model unavailable, but it's very much not in the spirit of open source. I can't train my own model using what Meta has given us here. And just to note, Google Gemma is the one they are releasing weights for. They are doing this and deserve credit for it. |