• 5C5C5C@programming.dev
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    5 months ago

    You’re being pretty dense if you can’t wrap your head around a basic concept of accountability.

    A human can choose to commit crimes with any product, including … I don’t know … a fork. You could choose to stab someone with a fork, and you’d be a criminal. We wouldn’t blame the fork manufacturer for that because the person who chose for a crime to be committed was the person holding the fork. That’s who’s accountable.

    But if a fork manufacturer starts selling forks which might start stabbing people on their own, without any human user intending for the stabbing to take place, then the manufacturer who produced and sold the auto-stabbing forks is absolutely guilty of criminal negligence.

    Edit: But I’ll concede that a law against the technology being used to assist humans in criminal activity in a broad sense is unrealistic. At best there would need to be bounds around the degree of criminal help that the tool is able to provide.

    • mindbleach
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      5 months ago

      But a human asking how to make a bomb is somehow the LLM’s fault.

      Or the LLM has to know that you are who you say you are, to prevent you from writing scam e-mails.

      The guy you initially replied to was talking about hooking up an LLM to a virus replication machine. Is that the level of safety you’re asking for? A machine so safe, we can give it to supervillains?