Anthropic 是否要求这样做?
Did Anthropic ask for this?

原始链接: https://www.verysane.ai/p/did-anthropic-ask-for-this

美国政府近日以国家安全风险为由,禁止 Anthropic 向外国公民提供其最新人工智能模型 Claude Fable 和 Claude Mythos 的访问权限。作者认为,这一指令是 Anthropic 长期以来倡导严格人工智能监管的直接后果。 Anthropic 首席执行官达里奥·阿莫代(Dario Amodei)一直公开游说政府进行干预,明确建议当局应有权阻止存在网络安全或生物武器风险的模型部署。作者指出,Anthropic 的言论本质上是自招限制,并提到政府现在所运用的正是该公司所请求的标准和权力。 文章认为,Anthropic 当初可能设想这些法规是针对竞争对手、开源项目或规模较小的公司,而非他们自己。通过将自身技术定性为国家安全威胁,Anthropic 为政府的干预提供了法律依据。归根结底,作者将其视为典型的“自食其果”,并批评该公司天真地信任政府机构能够管理复杂的技术风险,却未能意识到他们自己宣扬的安全论调终会被反过来针对他们自己。

这篇 Hacker News 讨论聚焦于围绕 Anthropic 服务限制引发的争议,特别是针对“Fable”人工智能项目。讨论者的观点主要分为以下几派: * **“当心你所祈求的”论点:** 一些用户认为,Anthropic 大力宣传其人工智能既强大又具有内在危险性,从而招致了这种审查。他们主张,该公司通过呼吁监管,实际上是邀请政府介入,进而导致了目前这种武断且强硬的干预。 * **意图辩护:** 另一些人则为 Anthropic 辩护,认为该公司呼吁监管是出于对生存风险的真诚担忧。他们认为 Anthropic 的目标是建立一个透明的法律框架,而非目前这种反复无常的政治恐吓氛围。 * **对治理的批评:** 许多参与者对政府的干预表示愤怒,称其为缺乏法律依据的越权行为。批评者认为,即使 Anthropic 的领导层犯了战术错误,政府的行为也为私营行业树立了一个危险的先例。 * **务实怀疑论:** 最后一群人以更愤世嫉俗的视角看待这一局势,认为 Anthropic 可能正利用监管障碍作为掩盖技术或算力限制的借口。
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原文

This past Friday, the US Government issued an export control directive that prohibits Anthropic from giving foreign nationals access to Claude Fable or Claude Mythos, their latest models.

I think Anthropic directly asked for this to happen.

A few days before this happened Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic, published “Policy on the AI Exponential”:

The government should have the power to block or deter deployment of the model if it is determined, in light of third-party assessment, to present unacceptable risks. This power must be scoped to the above four specific risks and there must be protective measures against political favoritism or arbitrary decisions.

Dario is known for writing about regulation and the direction of AI as an industry and Anthropic in particular, and what he says is taken very seriously and is considered a definitive statement of the company’s position. I take his statements this way, it is likely that the people who write our laws, and to whom he talks personally, take his statements this way, and it is likely that any judge he ends up in front of will also take his statements this way.

Since this is an official statement, let’s take it piece by piece to make absolutely sure he is asking for what happened to Anthropic two days later.

The government should have the power to block or deter deployment of the model

Yes. The government is blocking deployment of Anthropic’s model.

if it is determined, in light of third-party assessment, to present unacceptable risks.

Yes. This assessment was made by Amazon, a frequent and serious government contractor which is generally trusted to handle high-security government, intelligence, and military contractor concerns.

This power must be scoped to the above four specific risks

We have to back up a bit to see what four risks these are, but the previous paragraph states:

cybersecurity, biological weapons, loss of control of AI systems, and automated R&D that could accelerate these other risks.

Yes. Their third party report indicated that this formed a cybersecurity risk.

and there must be protective measures against political favoritism or arbitrary decisions.

This is the only difficult part of the paragraph. Are there protective measures against political favoritism or arbitrary decisions?

I believe there are: they are called “courts”. Dario is as free as the rest of us are to file a lawsuit and go in front of a judge and tell the judge that he is the victim of political favoritism or an arbitrary decision. That is, in fact, one of the primary purposes of the legal system.

I do not see why I should believe that he meant something else. If he wanted there to be some “protective measure” other than the law, as it already exists, he has had ample opportunity for years to say so. Anthropic has never, to my knowledge, proposed that anyone working in AI should have new or different protections from the government than the ordinary course of the law. If Anthropic did believe there should be such a thing, and did not say so while pushing for stricter laws, it seems extremely negligent of them.

So yes. Dario asked for this. Anthropic asked for this. They got what they asked for, letter for letter and word for word.

Not only did they ask for this, they asked for this for years, and they could not be talked out of asking for it. When people said that it might be bad to empower the government in this way, Anthropic was not sympathetic. Anthropic seemed to feel very strongly about this.

They have also, bizarrely, not changed their position even slightly as the government has changed hands and has mostly gone insane. They have continued to push for the government to have more power over AI, and they have continued to sell services to the government both directly and via intermediaries like Palantir and Amazon.

In my opinion, they mostly imagined these regulations applying to other people, especially open source projects, academics and smaller companies. Now that they are being subjected to the exact sort of regulation they have proposed, they do not like it.

I think all of this was extremely irresponsible of them, and I feel a good amount of schadenfreude that the leopard ate their face first.

Probably at least somewhat. The Department of War appeared to try to kill Anthropic earlier this year. That was, in my opinion, an overtly political, ham-handed power grab over the company by the Secretary of War. So far the legal system appears to agree with me in that assessment.

What’s different about this?

First, that none of the clumsy political posturing or clear over-reach is involved. Based on reporting, this was negotiated by Bessent, Secretary of Treasury, and you will find no statements about Anthropic being “woke” in anything he has said about the matter because he has said nothing publicly about the matter at all. Export control directives are a clear power that the US Government actually has, unlike much of what the Department of War was asserting and demanding.

Second, and much more seriously, there is an unimpeachable record of public statements by Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, and by Anthropic via official communications, that they believe Claude Mythos and Fable are of national security import because they pose serious bioweapon and cybersecurity risks, and that they should be regulated by the government. I am reasonably sure that a smart government lawyer would spend much of their time in court reading these statements into the record, if the government were sued over this.

Anthropic spends much of its time and energy talking about how dangerous AI is, and how it ought to be regulated as a military concern. They have been doing this for so long and so openly that it seems like people have gotten used to it, and no longer notice how weird and legally questionable it seems to be. What happens if the government takes everything Anthropic has said about itself both literally and seriously?

Dogs catch cars sometimes, and it’s often unfortunate when they do.

Broadly, AI companies like to talk up how cataclysmic and important what they’re doing is, and when the possible negatives are mentioned they tend to punt.

“The government” or “society” is meant to deal with all of those things. Well, now the government is — the actual government that really exists, and not an imagined one that only does good things and never does bad things.

I don’t particularly like this government action either. It does not seem likely at all that the US Government, as presently constituted, is capable of governing any radically new technology or an increasingly different future. If your plan is for the government to save us all later, you just don’t have a plan.

If no existing institution is able to govern the technology you’re making, you had better figure out making an institution that is or stop doing what you’re doing.

Nobody is going to care if you tell them that you thought the government or “society” was going to solve the problems you created.

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