Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by david_draco 746 days ago
Not sure how taking off all the safety and exploring "the best model" freely without considering ethics is a "scientific" approach. Computer scientists like us should think about the ethical and societal impacts of what they are building. At many universities, it is part of the curriculum.
4 comments

On the other hand, ChatGPT is becoming almost unusable now with all the weaseling around a lot of topics. Especially the way it inherited American prudishness which doesn't apply in most of Europe.

I do think uncensored models are necessary. At the minimum because it allows you to build your own censoring, you have to start with a clean slate.

Also I think it's the public that have to be taught to stop viewing LLMs as oracles that are always right. That would solve most of the issues around hallucinations.

Agreed. It's at the point where I suspect having no guardrails would be better than the current situation. e.g. MS Paint AI latency driven by phoning home to ensure the rendered image is PG enough. And of course, the latency is not even a fixed cost, because it's "judgement" of non-offensive is suspect.
If we cared about AI safety we simply would not develop it in the first place.
So basically the people who care do nothing, and just let the people who don't care develop and control it all? Or do the people who care use violence or a threat of violence to prevent others from doing it?
Replace AI with car, airplane, medic devices in the sentence above... Why is AI any different from other human creations? Why shouldn't we try building it responsibly?

I don't get the all or nothing attitude.

I hope you're not trying to cite those things as examples of stuff we've built out responsibly.
If you had a button that would erase cars, airplanes or medical devices as they exist today, would you push it? I believe these inventions are very net positive for the world as they are right now.
A hundred years ago, in Michigan the home of the automobile, we had an extensive electric light rail network between most cities of at least a few thousand people. You could walk to a trolley which ran every 15 minutes, ride it to a local interchange, and pick up a connecting line to any major city in the region.

Unfathomable what it would cost to rebuild that infrastructure.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_streetcar_consp...

You’re going to be disappointed asking computer scientists to think about ethics like an engineer would

Why? It’s a extreme minority of universities that *require* ethics for undergraduate CS

How prevalent is it? Well looking at the courses for 20 universities and you’ll find only 10-15% require it

In mechanical, civil etc…engineering in the US it is required in %30 of undergraduate degrees

In the US and Canada ethics study are required to take your PE exam but notably there is no PE exam requirement for CS jobs

It’s also not part of the culture, and it’s an even more extreme rarity in industry.

On the other hand, that's not how progress has historically happened. Scientists are most often motivated to do something just because it's interesting, not because of its impact to society.