• cyd@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    One major issue that concerns me about these regulations is whether free and open source AI projects will be left alone, or whether they’ll be liable to jumping through procedural hoops that individuals, or small volunteer teams, can’t possibly deal with. I have seen contradictory statements coming from different parties.

    Regulations of this sort always bring the risk of entrenching big, deep-pocketed companies that can just shrug and deal with the rules, while smaller players get locked out. We have seen that happening in some of the previous EU tech regulations.

    In the AI space, I think the major risk is not AI helping create disinformation, invading privacy, etc. Frankly, the genie is already out of the bottle on many of these fronts. The major worry, going forward, is AI models becoming monopolized by big companies, with FOSS alternatives being kept in a permanently inferior position by lack of resources plus ill-targeted regulations.

    • barsoap@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The regulation is generally about the application side – things like “states, don’t have a social score system” or “companies, if you make a CV scanner you better be bloody sure it doesn’t discriminate”. Part of the application side already was regulated, e.g. car autopilots, this is simply a more comprehensive list of iffy and straight-up unconscionable uses.

      Generating cat pictures with stable diffusion doesn’t even begin to fall under the regulation.

      Here’s a good tl;dr