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this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2024
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Technology
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But is literally does. If my goal is to use someone else's gun to kill someone, and the gun has a biometric lock, that absolutely interferes with the use (for unlawful shooting) of the gun.
Wrt AI, if someone's goal is to use a model that e.g. OpenAI operates, to build a bomb, an external control that prevents it is just as good as the AI model itself having some kind of baked in control.
Again a biometric lock neither prevents immoral use nor allows moral use outside of its very narrow conditions. It's effectively an amoral tool. It presumes anything you do with your gun will be moral and other uses are either immoral or unlikely enough to not bother worrying about.
AI has a lot of uses compared to a gun and just because someone has an idea for using it that is outside of the preconceived parameters doesn't mean it should be presumed to be immoral and blocked.
Further the biometric lock analogy falls apart when you consider LLM is a broad-scoped tool for use by everyone, while your personal weapon can be very narrowly scoped for you.
Consider a gun model that can only be fired by left-handed people because most guns crimes are committed by right-handed people. Yeah, you're ostensibly preventing 90% of immoral use of the weapon but at the cost of it no longer being a useful tool for most people.
Not every safety control needs to solve every safety issue. Almost all safety controls are narrowly-tailored to one threat model. You're essentially just arguing that if a safety control doesn't solve everything, it's not worth it.
LLMs being a tool that is so widely available is precisely why they need more built-in safety. The more dangerous a tool is, the more likely it is to be restricted to only professional or otherwise licensed users or businesses. Arguing against safety controls being built into LLMs is just going to accelerate their regulation.
Whether you agree with that mentality or not, we live in a Statist world, and protection of its constituent people from themselves and others is the (ostensible) primary function of a State.
Not exactly. My argument is that the more safety controls you build into the model, the less useful the model is at anything. The more you bend the responces away from true (whatever that is) the less of the tool you have.
Yeah I agree with that, but I'm saying protect people from the misuse of the tool. Don't break the tool to the point where it's worthless.