In today’s issue of Command Line, I reported that ByteDance has been violating the developer license of both Microsoft and OpenAI by using GPT-generated data to train its own, competing model in China. After my report was published, OpenAI spokesperson Niko Felix sent the following statement confirming that ByteDance’s account has been suspended: As I reported, most of ByteDance’s GPT usage has been done through Microsoft’s Azure platform, not through OpenAI directly. I’ve asked Microsoft if it will follow OpenAI and suspend ByteDance’s access as well.
“Open”AI. This blocking manoeuvre kills progress.
I don’t know about that. Training your AI on someone else’s AI feels a lot like drinking someone else’s piss. I doubt you are going to extract much innovation out of that
Can’t be any worse then training it on uninspired social media comments.
It works pretty well. You can create a good dataset for a fraction of the effort and price it would have required to do it by hand. The quality is similar. You just have to review each prompt so you don’t train your model on bad data.