OpenAI recently announced a program to fund experiments to democratise AI rules, which promises to allocate grants worth $1 million to whoever contributes best to solve its safety mishaps. While this might be the biggest offering made by any tech company to ‘fix’ an ongoing crisis, one might wonder if this is the next tactic by closed-door OpenAI to come across as a company that is giving more power to the people, in a possible bid to ‘comply’ what’s best for everyone. Or in other words, you are to be blamed if something goes wrong with ChatGPT or its flaws.
Thanks to ChatGPT, AI is now being shrouded with the need for regulation policies, and the whole affair is going as far as equating it to a nuclear war threat with tech leads rushing to sign a collaborative statement to show that everyone agrees to the AI threat. With the government stepping in to find ways to regulate AI through discussions and Senate hearings, and troubled parent Sam Altman agreeing to having an agency for regulating AI, the next step is obviously to come up with the whole plan for it. From releasing an elaborate blog on governance of superintelligence a few days after the Senate hearing to setting up democratisation plans for AI regulations, OpenAI is moving way ahead, probably even surpassing the government, to build a plan that would ultimately give the company unsurpassable power.
ChatGPT is being portrayed as this ideal child, leaving other AI kids in a state of despair and driving their creators/parents to trail OpenAI’s path, for the greater good of humanity and AI-kind. This brings us to question, if this is the right path to take in the first place?
United, we rule
Couple of weeks ago, OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman, at an AI Forward event in San Francisco, had spoken about how the company is working on a democratic approach to formulate AI regulations. He compared this approach to a Wikipedia-like model where people with various perspectives work together to reach a consensus on any entry. He also mentioned that the company does not want to write rules for everyone, instead will consider a ‘democratic decision-making’ process involving different kinds of people to shape the future of AI.
Unsurprisingly, within 3 days of the event, OpenAI officially announced the plan for ‘democratic inputs to AI.’
OpenAI has cleverly passed the work of AI regulation to people thereby allowing the company time to focus on their next expansion plans and maybe more advanced GPT models. By getting appropriate feedback from a wide community, the companies’ ‘open-source’ approach is another way to gather user feedback and help improve their system. Considering how ChatGPT is now allowing users to block their data from being used for training the GPT model, the current democratisation plan will help with gaining user feedback. The company had also mentioned in their announcement that the company would want to ‘learn from these experiments’ and use them for a more ‘global and ambitious process going forward.’
Distraction is the best medicine
Looks like by democratising the process for formulating AI rules, the company is creating more chaos and distraction, and slowly washing their hands off future repercussions. By preempting any future restrictions that may not be in the interests of the company, OpenAI announced this grant to proactively come up with a plan which in future may be even suggested to government or other bodies to use as framework. With certain countries and organisations banning the chatbot, a framework made by the people and a larger community is in a way transferring ownership of risks from the company to the larger audience. Either way, OpenAI will be unaffected by this and emerge as a winner at the end of this.
Obsessed with Humans
Looks like RLHF was not enough human interaction for OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and now the company craves for more. With limited or no access to user data after releasing the option to not save ‘chat history’, OpenAI continues to find ways to work without forgoing user feedback to further train and better their model.
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