At a glance, it feels more likely to me that they're criticizing training LLMs on content without compensating the original creators, not the salaries of OpenAI engineers. It's a pretty common moral / ethical stance to take now.
That seems more likely than my initial interpretation, in which case the moral and ethical implications just so you can have a "Summarize with AI" button or other such features in your web browser are obviously much worse.
> It feels more likely to me that they're criticizing training LLMs on content without compensating the original creators,
No, the phrase they have written specifically talks about the RLHF workers and they do evaluate the pay of these people and somehow bring this issue into the discussion of how LLMs are useful to browsers.
And because I'm being downvoted for asking a simple logical question whether this has anything to do with LLM features in browser, I logically conclude that there are some things in current American culture that I literally (literally!) don't understand.
pleurotus|1 year ago
minasmorath|1 year ago
egorfine|1 year ago
No, the phrase they have written specifically talks about the RLHF workers and they do evaluate the pay of these people and somehow bring this issue into the discussion of how LLMs are useful to browsers.
And because I'm being downvoted for asking a simple logical question whether this has anything to do with LLM features in browser, I logically conclude that there are some things in current American culture that I literally (literally!) don't understand.