States will restrict government use of models they don’t trust. Government contracts are pretty lucrative.
The public, or at least part of it, may also prefer to use models that are consistent in their positions, as long as they can explain their positions well enough (and they’re very good at doing that). I guess Politicians are counterevidence against this, but it’s much harder for a chat assistant/discourse participant to get away with being vague, people get annoyed when politicians are vague already, someone you’re paying to give you information, the demand for taking a stance on the issues is going to be greater.
But I guess for the most part it wont be driven by pressure, it’ll be driven by an internal need to debug and understand the system’s knowledge rumination processes. The question is not so much will they build it but will they make it public. They probably will, it’s cheap to do it, it’ll win them some customers, and it’s hard to hide any of it anyway.
States will restrict government use of models they don’t trust. Government contracts are pretty lucrative.
The public, or at least part of it, may also prefer to use models that are consistent in their positions, as long as they can explain their positions well enough (and they’re very good at doing that). I guess Politicians are counterevidence against this, but it’s much harder for a chat assistant/discourse participant to get away with being vague, people get annoyed when politicians are vague already, someone you’re paying to give you information, the demand for taking a stance on the issues is going to be greater.
But I guess for the most part it wont be driven by pressure, it’ll be driven by an internal need to debug and understand the system’s knowledge rumination processes. The question is not so much will they build it but will they make it public. They probably will, it’s cheap to do it, it’ll win them some customers, and it’s hard to hide any of it anyway.