It’s the other way around – comprehensive enforcement of laws to prevent current harms also prevent “frontier models” from getting developed and deployed. See my comment.
It’s unethical to ignore the harms of uses of open-source models (see laundering of authors’ works, or training on and generation of CSAM).
Harms there need to be prevented too. Both from the perspective of not hurting people in society now, and from the perspective of preventing the build up of risk.
It’s the other way around – comprehensive enforcement of laws to prevent current harms also prevent “frontier models” from getting developed and deployed. See my comment.
It’s unethical to ignore the harms of uses of open-source models (see laundering of authors’ works, or training on and generation of CSAM).
Harms there need to be prevented too. Both from the perspective of not hurting people in society now, and from the perspective of preventing the build up of risk.
Also, this raises the question whether “open-source” models are even “open-source” in the way software is: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4543807