| > I think they probably acquire it in accordance with Chinese law. You can easily look up[1] how China struggles with effective enforcement of IP laws. And specifically for LLMs, Anthropic recently claimed that Chinese models trained on it without permission.[2] > Who are you quoting with those marks? Double quote marks have other uses besides direct quotes, such as signaling unusual usage.[3] In this case, talking about countries like they're squabbling kids. > Started what? Fishy use of others' IP, packaging others' work without attribution. > To be fair to whom? To US companies using Chinese LLMs without attribution. --- [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegations_of_intellectual_pr... [2]: https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinese-companies-used-c... [3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_marks_in_English#Sig... |
As to what Anthropic said, it's quite specious as this analysis shows [1], ie the amount of "exchanges" is only tantamount to a single day or two of promoting, not nearly enough to actually get good RL training data from. Regardless, it's not as if other American LLM companies obtained training data legitimately, whatever that means in today's world.
[0] https://theworld.org/stories/2014/02/18/us-complains-other-n...
[1] https://youtu.be/_k22WAEAfpE