Current AI models are simply too unwieldy, brittle and malleable, academic and corporate research shows. Security was an afterthought in their training as data scientists amassed breathtakingly complex collections of images and text. They are prone to racial and cultural biases, and easily manipulated.

  • @MagicShel
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    4111 months ago

    Security wasn’t a concern? Are we talking about the model itself? Security isn’t part of the model at all and can’t be. Anything you try to add to a model is just a suggestion, and security cannot be a suggestion. Not to mention that it will create a bunch of, “as a secure AI language model I can’t let you do this.”

    A significant problem is a lay person cannot understand what a LLM even is without a lot of reading and thought and these articles are aimed at people who have done neither, or worse they are just posturing and propaganda.

    They are 100% biased and they can’t help but be since they absorb and emulate human writing. An AI that can’t write a biased take also can’t write from a black person’s perspective or a woman’s because bias is part of their experience. How ridiculous would it be if you asked an AI about slavery in America and it had no idea what you were talking about or thought it applied to all races equally?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      911 months ago

      I disagree. Even basic inclusion of words to change (ie: the N word to Black or f*g to gay) would have helped.

      Making these companies work harder to bring their product online isn’t a bad thing here.

      • @[email protected]
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        2311 months ago

        It sounds simple but data conditioning like that is how you get scunthorpe being blacklisted, and the effects on the model even if perfectly executed are unpredictable. It could get into issues of “race blindness”, where the model has no idea these words are bad and as a result is incapable of accommodating humans when the topic comes up. Suppose in 5 years there’s a therapist AI (not ideal but mental health is horribly understaffed and most people can’t afford a PhD therapist) that gets a client who is upset because they were called a f**got at school, it would have none of the cultural context that would be required to help.

        Techniques like “constitutional AI” and RLHF developed after the foundation models really are the best approach for these, as they allow you to get an unbiased view of a very biased culture, then shape the model’s attitudes towards that afterwards.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          I agree with you but I’m just gonna say with basic regex (hell, even without regex) you can easily find bad words without the problem you mentioned above.

          Word filters tend to suck in online games and stuff because they have to navigate players trying to avoid the filter, which I think could still be improved with a little effort

        • @[email protected]OP
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          311 months ago

          Then disallow the whole sentece with the N word.

          There are ways to do security in AI learning, easy or not. And companies just throwing their hands in the air and screaming it can’t be done are lying through their teeth.

            • @[email protected]
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              711 months ago

              I tried to get it to tell me how long it would take to eat a helicopter, as it’s one of the model’s pre-built prompts and thought it would be funny. Went through every AI coercive tactic that’s been thrown around and it just repeatedly said no and that I should be respectful and responsible about the thing. It was quite aggressive and annoying about it.

          • Norgur
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            11 months ago

            I think you might be led astray here. I get the feeling that you hadn’t dabbled much with AI before you read this article. The outputs of the generators themselves are incredibly sanitized. ChatGPT will not voice an opinion on anything if it can help it. Quite the opposite half of it’s output is usually some reprimand because it thought some word or other was offensive for no reason. I’m not talking about the N-Word here. Just go and try to make it insult a waffle iron. It’ll refuse.

            And for biases: Any bias in the models themselves is a bias that was present in it’s training data. If the model is misogynist, that’s because it was fed stuff that was. So if those things spew out questionable things, they actually present us with the fact that those questionable things are all too present in society and thus the internet and thus the LLM’s training data. Don’t waste energy to fix the “AI” (More like “word calculator”), it’s biases are only a symptom for deeper problems.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      The key to safe AI use is to treat the AI the same as the user. Let them automate tasks on behalf of the user (after confirmation) in their scope. That way no matter how much the model is manipulated, it can only ever perform the same tasks as the user.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      I like to say “they’re consistently biased”. They might have racial or misogynistic biases from the culture they ingested, but they’ll always express those biases in a consistent way. Meanwhile, humans can become more or less biased depending on whether they’ve eaten lunch yet or woke up tilted.