| ▲ | 9dev 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
It’s a bit in general, because if you actually read the EU AI legislation, most of it follows the right ideas and provides more safety, in the sense that OpenAI and Anthropic used to pretend to care about, but never really did. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | brookst 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
The ideas are debatable but generally correct. The EU's problem is that regulation stops at the ideas, and it is intentionally designed so to be impossible to ensure compliance in advance. So the regulation is really after the fact and a subjective judgment by regulators. So there's tons of risk even if you genuinely believe you're complying with the prescribed intents. My opinion on EU regulation would flip 180 degrees if they offered any kind of pre-clearance where you could propose a product, feature, or policy and be told in advance if it meets their subjective requirements. IMO you can have clear, specific requirements in advance, or you can have a body that provides interpretations of spirit-of-the-rules regulations in advance. Having neither is a problem. (yes, I'm aware of the argument that if you tell companies what's legal in advance they will just do the bare minimum or find loopholes... I don't find that to be a legit rule of law system) | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | Aerroon 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
With the way things are, having to disclose training data will basically make it impossible for an EU AI to compete. | ||||||||||||||
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