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He's saying that the only corporations with the fighting power to take on legal battles will end up being the big ones. So we may end up in a situation where AI will only be in the hands of the mega wealthy, instead of in the hands of regular people.
"Open source" models usually run on your local hardware instead of accessing it through some corporation's website. Who are you gonna sue when your own computer spits out garbage about you, yourself?
People don’t understand AI.
I imagine the ones creating and distributing the model. Even if you only got sued when you hosted a model and not when you shared it, it still doesn't make for a good ecosystem. Regular people should have the choice to use models even if it spits out garbage for certain tasks, it might suit their needs for their own task perfectly.
There's no reason to gatekeep llms and lock them behind hardware requirements, it's up to people to understand their limitations and what they are for.
I mean I'm not a lawyer but this is what I think is relevant here:
I really don't think it matters whether what's behind it is an LLM or an underpaid Indian writing the text in real time or if it's just static pages the site owner wrote. They're still responsible for it.
If you run it locally, none of it is public (until you publish what it generated, in which case you're responsible for the content).
It would be relevant if Microsoft or any of the LLM companies presented their models outputs as truths. It's been repeated multiple times that the outputs should be reviewed and verified. This is some serious "Reddit lied to me" vibes. Copilot literally says it uses AI and to check for mistake on the chat page.
On top of that, these could be viewed as bugs. Can you actually imagine suing over bugs about a novel type of software that is realistically two years old? Though tbh it will be a long time before we reach tech that cannot make a mistake. The general public expectations are a bit ridiculous imo.