That was a quote from a commenter in Hacker news, not my view. I reference the comment as something I thought a lot of people’s impression was pre- Dec 20th. You may be right that maybe most people didn’t have the impression that it’s unlikely, or that maybe they didn’t have a reason to think that. I don’t really know.
Thanks, I’ll put the quote in italics so it’s clearer.
Some AI companies, like OpenAI, have “eyes-off” APIs that don’t log any data afaik (or perhaps log only the minimum legally permitted, with heavy restrictions on who can access): described as Zero Day Retention here, https://openai.com/enterprise-privacy/ : How does OpenAI handle data retention and monitoring for API usage?
I was the original commenter on HN, and while my opinion on this particular claim is weaker now, I do think for OpenAI, a mix of PR considerations, employee discomfort (incl. whistleblower risk), and internal privacy restrictions make it somewhat unlikely to happen (at least 2:1?).
My opinion has become weaker because OpenAI seems to be internally a mess right now, and I could imagine scenarios where management very aggressively pushes and convinces employees to employ these more “aggressive” tactics.
Why do you consider it unlikely that companies could (or would) fish out the questions from API-logs?
That was a quote from a commenter in Hacker news, not my view. I reference the comment as something I thought a lot of people’s impression was pre- Dec 20th. You may be right that maybe most people didn’t have the impression that it’s unlikely, or that maybe they didn’t have a reason to think that. I don’t really know.
Thanks, I’ll put the quote in italics so it’s clearer.
This is a very relevant concern and that’s why Arc-AGI manages two versions. None of them are available in public.
Some AI companies, like OpenAI, have “eyes-off” APIs that don’t log any data afaik (or perhaps log only the minimum legally permitted, with heavy restrictions on who can access): described as Zero Day Retention here, https://openai.com/enterprise-privacy/ : How does OpenAI handle data retention and monitoring for API usage?
I was the original commenter on HN, and while my opinion on this particular claim is weaker now, I do think for OpenAI, a mix of PR considerations, employee discomfort (incl. whistleblower risk), and internal privacy restrictions make it somewhat unlikely to happen (at least 2:1?).
My opinion has become weaker because OpenAI seems to be internally a mess right now, and I could imagine scenarios where management very aggressively pushes and convinces employees to employ these more “aggressive” tactics.