Meta
will
now
allow
US
government
agencies
and
contractors
to
use
its
open-source
Llama
AI
model
for
“national
security
applications.”
In
an
announcement
on
Monday,
the
company
said
it’s
working
with
Amazon,
Microsoft,
IBM,
Lockheed
Martin,
Oracle,
and
others
to
make
Llama
available
to
the
government.
Under
Meta’s
“acceptable
use
policy,”
people
can’t
use
the
latest
Llama
3
model
for
“military,
warfare,
nuclear
industries
or
applications,
espionage.”
However,
as
explained
by
Meta,
this
update
opens
the
door
for
the
US
military
to
use
Llama
to
do
things
like
“streamline
complicated
logistics
and
planning,
track
terrorist
financing
or
strengthen
our
cyber
defenses.”
Meta
says
Oracle
has
already
started
building
on
Llama
to
“synthesize”
maintenance
documents
to
help
aircraft
technicians
make
repairs,
while
Lockheed
Martin
is
using
the
model
to
generate
code
and
analyze
data.
The
company
hinted
at
making
its
AI
model
available
to
the
government
during
its
quarter
three
earnings
call.
Last
week,
a
report
from
Reuters
revealed
that
Chinese
researchers
used
Meta’s
Llama
2
model
to
build
an
AI
system
for
the
country’s
military.
At
the
time,
a
Meta
spokesperson
told
Reuters
that
“the
alleged
role
of
a
single,
and
outdated,
version
of
an
American
open-source
model
is
irrelevant
when
we
know
China
is
already
investing
more
than
a
trillion
dollars
to
surpass
the
US
on
AI.”
In
its
post,
Meta
described
the
importance
for
the
US
to
get
ahead
in
the
AI
race,
saying
it’s
in
“both
America
and
the
wider
democratic
world’s
interest
for
American
open
source
models
to
excel
and
succeed
over
models
from
China
and
elsewhere.”
Other
AI
companies
are
getting
involved
with
the
military
as
well,
with
a
report
from
The
Intercept
revealing
that
the
US
Africa
Command
bought
cloud
computing
services
from
Microsoft,
offering
access
to
OpenAI’s
tools.
Google
DeepMind
also
has
a
cloud
computing
contract
with
the
Israeli
government.
(Originally posted by Emma Roth)
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