10th Indian Delegation to Dubai, Gitex & Expand North Star – World’s Largest Startup Investor Connect
Tech

Christina Montgomery closed LLM approach: IBM disagrees with closed LLM approach adopted by Big Techs


IBM does not agree with a closed large-language model approach several global companies such as Open AI, Microsoft, Google, and others have adopted, the company’s chief privacy and trust officer Christina Montgomery said.

The best way to develop artificial intelligence (AI)-based models was to be inclusive and transparent about the datasets used to train such LLMs, she told ET.

Elevate Your Tech Prowess with High-Value Skill Courses

Offering College Course Website
IIT Delhi IITD Certificate Programme in Data Science & Machine Learning Visit
MIT MIT Technology Leadership and Innovation Visit
IIM Kozhikode IIMK Advanced Data Science For Managers Visit

“If you look at models, like ChatGPT, it is a very closed model. You do not see the inputs and they do not disclose a lot about the data that is being used to train. From an IBM perspective, we think that is wrong. The future is an open one, not a closed set of licensing machines,” Montgomery said.

Apart from holding the foundational AI models responsible for the training, companies and persons deploying these models should also be accountable and responsible for the response they generate.

Generative AI models, for example, should give their enterprise customers more information about the data that went into training their model which enables or empowers the end customer to be assured that there is no bias. Such disclosures, especially around data sets used for training and the labels on those data sets can also be handed over to the regulator as proof in high-risk use cases, she said.

“IBM has been spending so much time on governance products and the right management because our enterprise customers are going to need to have life-cycle management, governance over the AI that they deploy in high-risk contexts,” she said.

Discover the stories of your interest


IBM is part of a 75-member alliance of companies such as AMD, Meta, Oracle, Sony, and Uber which have committed to “accelerate open innovation across the AI technology landscape that responsibly benefits people and society everywhere”.The regulation of AI models or even LLMs, whether open or closed, should be based on the specific use cases of the models, instead of regulating the technology altogether. Attempts by regulators and governments to regulate technology as a whole, however, will never be successful as such guardrails will never be able to keep up with the pace of change of such models, she said.

“For example, you are training a model for credit determination that obviously has demographic and personal information. You want to make sure it is not biased. Such use cases should have requirements such as privacy assessment impact around them,” Montgomery said.

Akin to privacy regulations, the guardrails for AI should also be interoperable and consistent in jurisdictions across the world. This will help companies build common programs around the very basic requirements from governments globally and then such models can be tweaked to address local laws, rules, and regulations, she said.

“I think countries need to be aware as they revise their data privacy and data protection framework as well as the challenges associated with implementation. The last thing countries want to do is to make something so impossible that they are never going to have enough regulators and bodies to enforce against companies that are not complying,” Montgomery said.



Source link

by Siliconluxembourg

Would-be entrepreneurs have an extra helping hand from Luxembourg’s Chamber of Commerce, which has published a new practical guide. ‘Developing your business: actions to take and mistakes to avoid’, was written to respond to  the needs and answer the common questions of entrepreneurs.  “Testimonials, practical tools, expert insights and presentations from key players in our ecosystem have been brought together to create a comprehensive toolkit that you can consult at any stage of your journey,” the introduction… Source link

by WIRED

B&H Photo is one of our favorite places to shop for camera gear. If you’re ever in New York, head to the store to check out the giant overhead conveyor belt system that brings your purchase from the upper floors to the registers downstairs (yes, seriously, here’s a video). Fortunately B&H Photo’s website is here for the rest of us with some good deals on photo gear we love. Save on the Latest Gear at B&H Photo B&H Photo has plenty of great deals, including Nikon’s brand-new Z6III full-frame… Source link

by Gizmodo

Long before Edgar Wright’s The Running Man hits theaters this week, the director of Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz had been thinking about making it. He read the original 1982 novel by Stephen King (under his pseudonym Richard Bachman) as a boy and excitedly went to theaters in 1987 to see the film version, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. Wright enjoyed the adaptation but was a little let down by just how different it was from the novel. Years later, after he’d become a successful… Source link