Seems false? You can violate an RSP by developing or deploying models under conditions where your current RSP says you won’t.
It’s true that some have an escape clause that allows for deployment when others are racing ahead. (And more generally you can revise the RSP.) But this requires specific actions (public revisions or maybe making it clear when the company is relying on the escape clause), it’s not that anything goes.
Anthropic’s escape clause is footnote 17 here. Conditions are that anthropic will acknowledge risks and invest significant effort in regulation that mitigates them. (Technically that doesn’t require them to say that they’re relying on the escape clause, I guess, but if think it would be pretty egregious for them to say that they technically fulfil those criteria now. I don’t expect that anyone sees themselves as relying on the escape clause atm.)
Seems false? You can violate an RSP by developing or deploying models under conditions where your current RSP says you won’t.
It’s true that some have an escape clause that allows for deployment when others are racing ahead. (And more generally you can revise the RSP.) But this requires specific actions (public revisions or maybe making it clear when the company is relying on the escape clause), it’s not that anything goes.
Anthropic’s escape clause is footnote 17 here. Conditions are that anthropic will acknowledge risks and invest significant effort in regulation that mitigates them. (Technically that doesn’t require them to say that they’re relying on the escape clause, I guess, but if think it would be pretty egregious for them to say that they technically fulfil those criteria now. I don’t expect that anyone sees themselves as relying on the escape clause atm.)