AI is making literary leaps – now we need the rules to catch up
Last February, OpenAI, an artificial intelligence research group based in San Francisco, announced that it has been training an AI language model called GPT-2, and that it now "generates coherent paragraphs of text, achieves state-of-the-art performance on many language-modelling benchmarks, and performs rudimentary reading comprehension, machine translation, question answering, and summarisation – all without task-specific training". If true, this would be a big deal. But, said OpenAI, "due to our concerns about malicious applications of the technology, we are not releasing the trained model. As an experiment in responsible disclosure, we are instead releasing a much smaller model for researchers to experiment with, as well as a technical paper." Given that OpenAI describes itself as a research institute dedicated to "discovering and enacting the path to safe artificial general intelligence", this cautious approach to releasing a potentially powerful and disruptive tool into the wild seemed appropriate.
Nov-2-2019, 17:12:33 GMT
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