AI should not be a black box - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

AI should not be a black box

Spats at OpenAI highlight the need for companies to become more transparent

Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI. Researchers once released papers on their work, but the rush for market share has ended such disclosures

Proponents and detractors of AI tend to agree that the technology will change the world. The likes of OpenAI’s Sam Altman see a future where humanity will flourish; critics prophesy societal disruption and excessive corporate power. Which prediction comes true depends in part on foundations laid today. Yet the recent disputes at OpenAI — including the departure of its co-founder and chief scientist — suggest key AI players have become too opaque for society to set the right course.

An index developed at Stanford University finds transparency at AI leaders Google, Amazon, Meta and OpenAI falls short of what is needed. Though AI emerged through collaboration by researchers and experts across platforms, the companies have clammed up since OpenAI’s ChatGPT ushered in a commercial AI boom. Given the potential dangers of AI, these companies need to revert to their more open past.

Transparency in AI falls into two main areas: the inputs and the models. Large language models, the foundation for generative AI such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini, are trained by trawling the internet to analyse and learn from “data sets” that range from Reddit forums to Picasso paintings. In AI’s early days, researchers often disclosed their training data in scientific journals, allowing others to diagnose flaws by weighing the quality of inputs.

Today, key players tend to withhold the details of their data to protect against copyright infringement suits and eke out a competitive advantage. This makes it difficult to assess the veracity of responses generated by AI. It also leaves writers, actors and other creatives without insight into whether their privacy or intellectual property has been knowingly violated.

The models themselves lack transparency too. How a model interprets its inputs and generates language depends upon its design. AI firms tend to see the architecture of their model as their “secret sauce”: the ingenuity of OpenAI’s GPT-4 or Meta’s Llama pivots on the quality of its computation. AI researchers once released papers on their designs, but the rush for market share has ended such disclosures. Yet without the understanding of how a model functions, it is difficult to rate an AI’s outputs, limits and biases.

All this opacity makes it hard for the public and regulators to assess AI safety and guard against potential harms. That is all the more concerning as Jan Leike, who helped lead OpenAI’s efforts to steer super-powerful AI tools, claimed after leaving the company this month that its leaders had prioritised “shiny products” over safety. The company has insisted it can regulate its own product, but its new security committee will report to the very same leaders.

Governments have started to lay the foundation for AI regulation through a conference last year at Bletchley Park, President Joe Biden’s executive order on AI and the EU’s AI Act. Though welcome, these measures focus on guardrails and “safety tests”, rather than full transparency. The reality is that most AI experts are working for the companies themselves, and the technologies are developing too quickly for periodic safety tests to be sufficient. Regulators should call for model and input transparency, and experts at these companies need to collaborate with regulators.

AI has the potential to transform the world for the better — perhaps with even more potency and speed than the internet revolution. Companies may argue that transparency requirements will slow innovation and dull their competitive edge, but the recent history of AI suggests otherwise. These technologies have advanced on the back of collaboration and shared research. Reverting to those norms would only serve to increase public trust, and allow for more rapid, but safer, innovation.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

美国不再有羞耻感了吗?

卢斯:美国政客面对丑闻的厚颜无耻是这个时代的一大特征。

瑞士财富管理公司将目光投向亚洲

瑞士作为世界财富管理中心的声誉近年来受到了打击,但瑞士财富管理公司仍可在其竞争对手香港和新加坡占据主导地位。

加拿大-印度外交对峙背后的印度犯罪帮派

31岁的比什努瓦是印度小报的话题常客,他在被指控从狱中策划勒索、谋杀和其他罪行。

Lex专栏:美国人对信用卡的钟爱削弱了即时支付的吸引力

尽管即时支付在一些国家大行其道,但在美国,Visa和万事达卡现在依然可以放宽心。

抢购西方资产的俄罗斯发胶巨头

阿列克谢•萨加尔是受益于西方公司撤离俄罗斯市场的新一代商人之一。

拥有多少钱才算是一名超级富豪?

是1000万美元、3000万美元,还是1亿美元?亿万富翁的迅速崛起颠覆了有钱精英的定义。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×