As I’ve discussed in the comments on a related post, I don’t think OpenAI meaningfully changed any of its stated policies with regards to military usage. I don’t think OpenAI really ever promised anyone they wouldn’t work with militaries, and framing this as violating a past promise weakens the ability to hold them accountable for promises they actually made.
What OpenAI did was to allow more users to use their product. It’s similar to LessWrong allowing crawlers or jurisdictions that we previously blocked to now access the site. I certainly wouldn’t consider myself to have violated some promise by allowing crawlers or companies to access LessWrong that I had previously blocked (or for a closer analogy, let’s say we were currently blocking AI companies from crawling LW for training purposes, and I then change my mind and do allow them to do that, I would not consider myself to have broken any kind of promise or policy).
As I’ve discussed in the comments on a related post, I don’t think OpenAI meaningfully changed any of its stated policies with regards to military usage. I don’t think OpenAI really ever promised anyone they wouldn’t work with militaries, and framing this as violating a past promise weakens the ability to hold them accountable for promises they actually made.
What OpenAI did was to allow more users to use their product. It’s similar to LessWrong allowing crawlers or jurisdictions that we previously blocked to now access the site. I certainly wouldn’t consider myself to have violated some promise by allowing crawlers or companies to access LessWrong that I had previously blocked (or for a closer analogy, let’s say we were currently blocking AI companies from crawling LW for training purposes, and I then change my mind and do allow them to do that, I would not consider myself to have broken any kind of promise or policy).
Mmm, nod. I will look into the actual history here more, but, sounds plausible. (edited the previous comment a bit for now)