
Clement Delangue, CEO of Hugging Face, has expressed concerns regarding the rise of open-source AI models from China, highlighting issues related to censorship. In a recent interview, he noted that these models may not respond accurately to sensitive topics, such as the Tiananmen Square protests. This sentiment reflects broader apprehensions within the tech community, including criticism from employees at OpenAI, regarding the implications of these models on global discourse and information control. Delangue's remarks underscore the challenges posed by the concentration of AI development in regions with stringent censorship policies.
NEW: @HuggingFace CEO @ClementDelangue says he's "a little worried" about the rise of open-source Chinese AI models. "If you create a chatbot and ask it a question about Tiananmen, well, it’s not going to respond to you the same way", he warned. https://t.co/Tl0ei3dobR
1. Hugging Face CEO raises red flags on Chinese AI models 🚩- https://t.co/0wVnRJmXPS 2. AI ads show unsettling disconnect from human interaction 🌀- https://t.co/rNwDZEoTvZ 3. ChatGPT crashes when asked about David Mayer ⚠- https://t.co/8byHqVi1o1 4. AWS launches SageMaker… https://t.co/GuqFLoCVnq
In an interview, Hugging Face CEO Clement Delangue said that he is "a little worried" about the strong concentration of top open-source AI models from China (@charlesrollet1 / TechCrunch) https://t.co/pr83c2UZtr https://t.co/VGveLHzbel https://t.co/ZOzeer1FAj