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by rkou
641 days ago
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AI safety is expensive, or even impossible, by releasing your models for local inference (not behind API). Meta AI shifts the responsibility of highly-general highly-capable AI models to smaller developers, putting ethics, safety, legal, and guard-rails responsibility on innovators who want to innovate with AI (without having the knowledge or resources to do so by themselves) as an "open-source" hacking project. While Mark claims his Open Source AI is safer, because fully transparent and many eyes make all bugs shallow, the latest technical report makes mention of an internal, secret, benchmark that had to be developed, because available benchmarks did not suffice at that level of capabilities. For child abuse generation, it only makes mention that it investigated this, not any results of these tests or conditions under which it possibly failed. They shove all this liability on the developer, while claiming any positive goodwill generated. It completely loses their motivation to care for AI safety and ethics if fines don't punish them, but those who used the library to build. Reasonable for Meta? Yes. Reasonable for us to nod along when they misuse open source to accomplish this? No. |
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But, I think in that case the failing is not in not taking the liability for what other people do with their tool. It is in producing the tool in the first place.