Thursday, March 07, 2024

AI in the Battlefield

The name, "Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Node" (TITAN), is pretty clever. Peter Thiel's Denver-Based Palantir Technologies, a software-driven data analytics company in the defense and intelligence domain, just won a US$178M contract to build an AI-driven mobile battlefield sensor fusion platform. From Palantir's home page: "AI-Powered Operations, For Every Decision". In this context, TITAN consumes a huge amount of data from remote sensors and tells soldiers what to destroy.

Cool. And absolutely necessary. Soldiers on the battlefield are inundated with information, more than humans can assimilate in the time they have. And even if we didn't build it, our peer adversaries surely will (or more likely, are).

This is the kind of neural network-based AI that's going to mistake a commercial airliner for an enemy bomber and recommend that it be shot down, even if its own cyber-finger isn't on the trigger. Because time is short, and if no other information is forthcoming, someone will pull that trigger.

In the inevitable following Congressional investigation, military officers, company executives, and AI scientists and engineers will be forced to admit that they have no idea why the AI made that mistake, and in fact they can't know, because no one can. When you have an AI with over a trillion - not an exaggeration - variables in its learning model, no one can understand how Deep Learning really works.

Seriously, this is a real problem in the AI field right now. AIs do things their own developers did not anticipate, and cannot explain.

Accidental commercial airliner shoot downs are so common they have their own Wikipedia page. And it's just a matter of time before the cyber-finger is on the trigger, because it can respond so more quickly than its overwhelmed human operators.

The worst thing that could happen is for TITAN be an unqualified success. Someone will get the idea that maybe such a system should have its cyber-finger on the red button for strategic ICBMs.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Pig Butchering with Large Language Models

I have my Facebook default privacy settings locked down so that only my FB friends can see my posts on my timeline. And I only accept friend requests from folks I feel I know pretty well, and typically only those I know in meat space. But when I shared my post about selling a BMW motorcycle to my motorcycle club's group on FB, I had to change the privacy setting of that particular post from private to public so that members who weren't on my FB friends list could see it. The comments below are the result.

Pig Butchering With LLMs

Take a close look at them. All of course claim to be from attractive young women. The first two of them are just short comments trying to get me to engage. The fourth one is a long missive that is probably a standard form letter with no specific detail. But the third one has enough specificity that it had me looking up the commenter's profile: a young divorced Asian woman in the fashion industry who lives in San Francisco. Possible but not likely in the BMW motorcycle owner demographic.

It was almost certainly written by an AI, using the current technology based on an artificial neural network, like the Large Language Models such as ChatGPT use. It has all sorts of detail about my post, and at first seems legit, but is really nothing much more than a rewording of what I originally posted to the group.

This is where LLMs are taking the pig butchering or romance scam artists. As they are trained with more and more data, they are just going to get better and better.

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Are AI Generated Works Intellectual Property?

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has once again stressed that only humans can be listed as inventors on patents. And the U.S. Copyright Office, part of the Library of Congress and typically a small bureaucracy with just a few people, is about to make big news as it evaluates whether AI generated works can be copyrighted.

If the USPTO declines to recognize AI "inventors", and the Library of Congress similarly disallows copyrighting of AI generated material, that's going to really put a crimp in the monetization of AI generated intellectual property, since it cannot be protected.

My current thinking is that right now it's right thing to do.

The current technology of Generative Pre-Trained (GPT) AIs are nothing more than gigantic text or image prediction engines based on huge artificial neural network-based statistical models trained with enormous amounts of human created and curated input - input for which the original authors and artists are not being compensated, despite the fact that their work may have been copyrighted. There's no cognition or creativity involved.

But the counter argument is worth thinking about.

We ourselves are nothing but gigantic text or image prediction engines based on huge natural neural network-based statistical models trained with enormous amounts of human created and curated input - material we have read or examined - for which the original authors and artists are not being compensated, despite the fact that their work may have been copyrighted.

The difference is that when we write or make art, we may be trying use the trained neural network in our brain to create what others have not done before. That's creativity.

Update (2024-02-20)

Another counter argument is that there is creativity and cognition involved in the prompt engineering - the term used for the creation of the prompt, or series of prompts, the human operator gives the AI to produce its output. Perhaps, in this respect, using an AI is no different than using tools like Microsoft Word or Adobe Photoshop for your writing or art.

I'm still leaning towards not providing IP protection for AI generated output. But this is a complicated issue. As the subtitle of my blog reminds you, 90% of this opinion could be crap.

Sources

(Perhaps ironically, this article is based on the no doubt copyrighted work of several others that I would like to cite... if only I could remember them. As I do, I'll add the citations here.) 

Emilia David, "US patent office confirms AI can't hold patents", The Verge, 2024-02-13, https://www.theverge.com/2024/2/13/24072241/ai-patent-us-office-guidance

Cecilia Kang, "The Sleepy Copyright Office in the Middle of a High Stakes Clash over A.I.", The New York Times, 2024-01-25, https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/25/technology/ai-copyright-office-law.html

Louis Menand, "Is A.I. the Death of I.P.?", The New Yorker, 2024-01-15, https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/01/22/who-owns-this-sentence-a-history-of-copyrights-and-wrongs-david-bellos-alexandre-montagu-book-review

Shira Perlmutter, "Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence", U.S. Copyright Office, Federal Register, 2023-03-10, https://copyright.gov/ai/ai_policy_guidance.pdf

Katherine Kelly Vidal, "Inventorship Guidance for AI-assisted Invention", U.S. Patent and Trademark Office,  Federal Register, 2024-02-13, https://public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2024-02623.pdf