True, but if that final output had not been known to you, and/or you had set off the machine that triggered the bomb under duress, that changes your liability.
No. If it’s within the power of the device, method or whatever you do have the blood on your hands. (at least morally)
However. In business terms, since it’s management nothing will happen.
To put it in simple terms, if you ask someone to do something for you and you agree that anything is allowed to achieve this, you’ve agreed and gave your consent. In technical terms for AI this is especially fatal since you can technically not safely permanently guardrail an LLM.
That “and/or” is splitting up wildly different cases. If you drive a bus through a red light because you thought the intersection was clear, and it turns out it wasn’t. Is wildly different from the scenario in Speed.
If I set off a Rube Goldberg machine whose final output is to detonate a bomb, I don’t get to show up in court and say the machine did it.
True, but if that final output had not been known to you, and/or you had set off the machine that triggered the bomb under duress, that changes your liability.
No. If it’s within the power of the device, method or whatever you do have the blood on your hands. (at least morally)
However. In business terms, since it’s management nothing will happen.
To put it in simple terms, if you ask someone to do something for you and you agree that anything is allowed to achieve this, you’ve agreed and gave your consent. In technical terms for AI this is especially fatal since you can technically not safely permanently guardrail an LLM.
That “and/or” is splitting up wildly different cases. If you drive a bus through a red light because you thought the intersection was clear, and it turns out it wasn’t. Is wildly different from the scenario in Speed.