Hashed’s Simon Kim believes the way forward for synthetic intelligence hinges on a radical shift: breaking open the black field of centralized fashions like OpenAI and constructing a decentralized, clear ecosystem powered by blockchain.
For Kim, CEO of South Korea’s main crypto VC fund, the urgency is evident. AI’s unchecked centralization threatens to create a “god” we don’t perceive, whereas blockchain gives the instruments to reward creators, shield mental property, and supply transparency into generative AI – which has been extensively criticized for its bias and selective reasoning.
“AI is being centralized. OpenAI is not open, and it is controlled by very few people, so it’s quite dangerous. Making this type of [closed source] foundational model is similar to making a ‘god’, but we don’t know how it works,” he stated in an interview with CoinDesk.
Kim argues that open-source AI fashions like Meta’s Llama are an instance of how AI will be constructed with decentralization and transparency in thoughts.
However he says the shortage of sturdy incentive mechanisms for knowledge suppliers – i.e. everybody who makes use of the web – remains to be an issue.
“AI models are just crawling the original content on the web and giving answers without compensating the creators,” Kim stated.
Kim believes we will repair this by growing a “copyright layer” the place rights holders can monitor how their content material is used – and re-used – by AI whereas being paid alongside the way in which.
Hashed thinks it’s discovered an answer to this with Story, an IP administration protocol that it led a Collection-B spherical in final yr.
The fund hasn’t invested in any decentralized AI initiatives but, however feels it’s constructing publicity to the house by way of its funding in Story.
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“We definitely need a blockchain-based IP system to incentivize the original creator, both the creator and the remixers,” Kim continued.
Kim is much from the one voice calling for open supply AI growth. A rising refrain of voices from Meta’s Mark Zuckererg to the Economist’s editorial board all agree that the black field of closed supply AI – the deity whose choices and workings stay a thriller – has to go for the business to mature.
Nevertheless it’s as much as Kim to persuade them that the answer lies in blockchain and crypto.