| ▲ | AnthonyMouse 20 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> It would be a very different story if someone discovered a new type of WMD that anyone could make in a few days from commonly available materials, if only they knew the secret recipe. It would need even more to be public. Suppose it was easy to make a biological weapon. You wouldn't be able to effectively censor it anyway and trying to would leave you sitting on an apocalypse bomb waiting for it to leak to someone nefarious or get independently rediscovered before anyone else is allowed to discuss it. What you need is for knowledge of how it works to be public so that everyone can join in the effort to quickly devise countermeasures before some nutcase destroys the world. Moreover, if something is already public enough to be in the AI training data then it's already public. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | nearbuy 19 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Your plan is to release the secret recipe that anyone can use to make a WMD in a few days to absolutely everyone and hope someone comes up with a countermeasure before some nutcase or terrorist decides to try out the new WMD? The odds of us inventing and deploying countermeasures to a new bomb or chemical weapon or biological agent in a few days is miniscule. You're gambling with terrible odds to uphold a principle in a hypothetical scenario where it's totally impractical. What happened to responsible disclosure, where you fix the vulnerability before disclosing it to the public? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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