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csemple | 1 month ago
At Ontario Digital Service, we built COVID-19 tools, digital ID, and services for 15M citizens. We evaluated LLM systems to improve services but could never procure them.
The blocker wasn't capability—it was liability. We couldn't justify "the model probably won't violate privacy regulations" to decision-makers who need to defend "this system cannot do X."
This post demonstrates the "Prescription Pad Pattern": treating authority boundaries as persistent state that mechanically filters tools.
The logic: Don't instruct the model to avoid forbidden actions—physically remove the tools required to execute them. If the model can't see the tool, it can't attempt to call it.
This is a reference implementation. The same pattern works for healthcare (don't give diagnosis tools to unlicensed users), finance (don't give transfer tools to read-only sessions), or any domain where "98% safe" means "0% deployable."
Repo: https://github.com/rosetta-labs-erb/authority-boundary-ledge...
alex000kim|1 month ago
rdtsc|1 month ago
I am only half-joking. Kids talking to LLMs to get homework done, people use it for therapy or companionship, for work, even to "Google things". Pretty soon you'll find yourself at a bar, wanting to call your friend a dumbass for saying some stupid shit and instead you'll hear yourself say "You're absolutely right, Jim! ..."
yellow_lead|1 month ago
kspacewalk2|1 month ago
Flipflip79|1 month ago
I think this article would really benefit from being rewritten in your own words. The concept is good
skipants|1 month ago
Unfortunately, it's not. Once you read through the slop the implementation is still getting a pass/fail security response from the LLM, which the premise of OP's article is railing against.
abejfehr|1 month ago
Yikes (regarding the AI patterns in the comment)
Jean-Papoulos|1 month ago
Ah, this explains a lot about the state of Canada actually.
an_d_rew|1 month ago
FWIW, I have been reading policy documents for a long time and I thought you sounded rather human and natural… Just very professional! :)
neom|1 month ago
philipwhiuk|1 month ago
(Now dead: https://thinkdigital.ca/podcast/the-end-of-the-ontario-digit... )
haunter|1 month ago
csemple|1 month ago
phyzome|1 month ago