Those things have literally nothing to do with each other. An open source system or model still needs configurable restrictions to stop it going off the rails in basically any real-world use.
A platform running it can remove them. Same way platforms running GPT-based software can set their own limitations currently.
No sane platform will remove them entirely, unless their goal is demonstrating what a complete circus of misinformation and schizophrenic ranting results from doing so.
Remember early public chatGPT’s totally insane behavior? No company wants to use something that will potentially say literally anything to a customer.
Those things have literally nothing to do with each other. An open source system or model still needs configurable restrictions to stop it going off the rails in basically any real-world use.
But if it’s open source those restrictions can just removed
A platform running it can remove them. Same way platforms running GPT-based software can set their own limitations currently.
No sane platform will remove them entirely, unless their goal is demonstrating what a complete circus of misinformation and schizophrenic ranting results from doing so.
Remember early public chatGPT’s totally insane behavior? No company wants to use something that will potentially say literally anything to a customer.