This would be a good opportunity to provide a thoughtful, sane, and coherent response to voice your opinion on the future regulation policies for AI to counter the fearmongering.

How to submit a comment: https://www.regulations.gov/document/NTIA-2023-0009-0001

All electronic public comments on this action, identified by Regulations.gov docket number NTIA–2023–0009, may be submitted through the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. The docket established for this request for comment can be found at www.Regulations.gov, NTIA–2023–0009. To make a submission, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon, complete the required fields, and enter or attach your comments. Additional instructions can be found in the “Instructions” section below, after “Supplementary Information.”

    • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      From their list of concerns:

      The benefits and risks of making model weights widely available compared to the benefits and risks associated with closed models; Innovation, competition, safety, security, trustworthiness, equity, and national security concerns with making AI model weights more or less open; and The role of the U.S. government in guiding, supporting, or restricting the availability of AI model weights

      It seems like they’re concerned about both open and closed models, and they’re interested in supporting as well as potentially regulating both.

      • GluWu@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Lol, no they aren’t. That’s just legalese. A government regulator agency isn’t going to open feedback about what it should be doing regulatory wise and promt the entire thing with “Why should we close AI to only corporations willing to post enough money”. They have to at least include the “but maybe potentially let average people use AI” part so when they close everything down they can point back and say “look, we were open to talking about open solutions”.

        • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          That tends to be the outcome of processes like this, and sometimes it is because the agency already decided on policy ahead of time and only asked for public input for the sake of appearances. But in other cases the request for input is in good faith, and industry interests end up dominating the discussion because other voices convince themselves they’d be ignored anyway.

          In the case of new industries still in flux, it’s more likely that commercial interests haven’t yet infiltrated the relevant agencies to dictate policy from within—which is why they have to rely on hyperbolic scare tactics and hope no one contradicts them.

    • rufus@discuss.tchncs.de
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      8 months ago

      Haha, that’d be fun. EU with least regulation on open-weight models and the US exalctly the other way around.

  • Lemmeenym@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    Am American, am not particularly tech savvy. Can anyone recommend a reliable resource to read more about this? Are there any nonprofit or foss groups that are likely to have a published position on how AI should be regulated?

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Well the open source community should have a near zero unified opinion on how a broad technology should be centrally managed. Individual groups or persons should hold their own positions.

      This is like saying binary search, or encryption should be regulated. LLM is just a particular technology. A fundamental thing. It’s just math and systems.

      Products and derivates may be another thing (like Perhaps creating deepfakes of living people, for example, or training a model on copyright material)

  • xia@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 months ago

    They finally found a way to make freedom-software a boogieman… at least plausibly enough to fool the panicky public.