The EU's AI Act raises questions about data transparency and trade secrets
Briefly

In the 18 months since Microsoft-backed OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT to the public, there has been a surge of public engagement and investment in generative AI, a set of applications that can be used to rapidly produce text, images, and audio content.
One of the more contentious sections of the Act states that organisations deploying general-purpose AI models, such as ChatGPT, will have to provide 'detailed summaries' of the content used to train them.
AI companies are highly resistant to revealing what their models have been trained on, describing the information as a trade secret that would give competitors an unfair advantage if made public.
"It's like cooking," he added. "There's a secret part of the recipe that the best chefs wouldn't share, the 'je ne sais quoi' that makes it different."
Read at Fast Company
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