Tech & Startup

Mark Zuckerberg is now endorsing open-source AI tech

Zuckerberg open source AI
Meta AI is powered by Llama 3.1, which has been publicly released as an open-source model last month. Images: Mark Zuckerberg/Meta

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta Platforms and the founder of Facebook, has recently released an open letter titled "Open source AI is the path forward". In it, he publicly endorsed the use of open-source AI tech, indicating how tech companies could flourish if restrictions regarding AI were lifted by competitors.

Here are some key things you might want to know about Zuckerberg's latest stance on open-source AI tech, and what this concept entails.

What is 'open source'?

The history of computer technology has long pitted open-source aficionados against companies clinging to their intellectual property. "Open source" refers to software development where the program code is made freely available to the public, allowing developers to tinker and build on it as they wish.

Many of the internet's foundational technologies, such as the Linux operating system and the Apache web server, are products of open-source development. However, open source is not without challenges.

Maintaining large projects, ensuring consistent quality, and managing a wide range of contributors can be complex. As such, almost by definition, keeping open-source projects financially sustainable is a challenge.

Why is Meta AI 'open source'?

Zuckerberg is probably the last person you would expect to embrace open source. Meta maintains total control over its Instagram and Facebook platforms, leaving little to no leeway for outside developers or researchers to tinker around.

The Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which an outside vendor was revealed in 2018 to be using the platform to gather user information for nefarious practices, only made the company more protective. Meta's sudden embrace of the open source ethos is driven by its bitterness towards Apple, whose iPhone rules keep tight control on what Meta and all outside apps can do on their devices.

"One of my formative experiences has been building our services constrained by what Apple will let us build on their platforms," Zuckerberg said. "Between the way they tax developers, the arbitrary rules they apply, and all the product innovations they block from shipping, it's clear that Meta and many other companies would be freed up if...competitors were not able to constrain what we could build," he wrote.

That concern has now spread to generative AI, but this time it is Microsoft-backed OpenAI and Google that are the closed-fence culprits that charge developers and keep a tight lid on their AI technology.

Doubters argue that Meta is embracing open source because it came late to the AI party, and is seeking to blow open the field with free access to a powerful model.

What is Llama?

Meta's open source LLaMA 3.1 (for Large Language Model Meta AI) is the company's latest version of its generative AI technology that can spew out human standard content in just seconds. Performance-wise, it can be compared to OpenAI's GPT-4 or Google's Gemini, and like those models is "trained" before deployment by ingesting data from the internet.

But unlike those models, developers can access the technology for free, and make adaptations as they see fit for their specific use cases. Meta says that LLaMA 3.1 is as good as the best models out there, but unlike its main rivals, it only deals with text, with the company saying it will later match the others with images, audio and video.

Security threat

In the rivalry over generative AI, defenders of the closed model argue that the Meta way is dangerous, as it allows bad actors to weaponise powerful technology. In Washington, lobbyists argue over the distinction, with opponents to open source insisting that models like Llama can be weaponised by countries like China.

Meta argues that transparency assures a more level playing field and that a world of closed models will ensure that only a few big companies, and a powerhouse nation like China, will be in control. Startups, universities, and small businesses will "miss out on opportunities," Zuckerberg said.

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Mark Zuckerberg is now endorsing open-source AI tech

Zuckerberg open source AI
Meta AI is powered by Llama 3.1, which has been publicly released as an open-source model last month. Images: Mark Zuckerberg/Meta

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta Platforms and the founder of Facebook, has recently released an open letter titled "Open source AI is the path forward". In it, he publicly endorsed the use of open-source AI tech, indicating how tech companies could flourish if restrictions regarding AI were lifted by competitors.

Here are some key things you might want to know about Zuckerberg's latest stance on open-source AI tech, and what this concept entails.

What is 'open source'?

The history of computer technology has long pitted open-source aficionados against companies clinging to their intellectual property. "Open source" refers to software development where the program code is made freely available to the public, allowing developers to tinker and build on it as they wish.

Many of the internet's foundational technologies, such as the Linux operating system and the Apache web server, are products of open-source development. However, open source is not without challenges.

Maintaining large projects, ensuring consistent quality, and managing a wide range of contributors can be complex. As such, almost by definition, keeping open-source projects financially sustainable is a challenge.

Why is Meta AI 'open source'?

Zuckerberg is probably the last person you would expect to embrace open source. Meta maintains total control over its Instagram and Facebook platforms, leaving little to no leeway for outside developers or researchers to tinker around.

The Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which an outside vendor was revealed in 2018 to be using the platform to gather user information for nefarious practices, only made the company more protective. Meta's sudden embrace of the open source ethos is driven by its bitterness towards Apple, whose iPhone rules keep tight control on what Meta and all outside apps can do on their devices.

"One of my formative experiences has been building our services constrained by what Apple will let us build on their platforms," Zuckerberg said. "Between the way they tax developers, the arbitrary rules they apply, and all the product innovations they block from shipping, it's clear that Meta and many other companies would be freed up if...competitors were not able to constrain what we could build," he wrote.

That concern has now spread to generative AI, but this time it is Microsoft-backed OpenAI and Google that are the closed-fence culprits that charge developers and keep a tight lid on their AI technology.

Doubters argue that Meta is embracing open source because it came late to the AI party, and is seeking to blow open the field with free access to a powerful model.

What is Llama?

Meta's open source LLaMA 3.1 (for Large Language Model Meta AI) is the company's latest version of its generative AI technology that can spew out human standard content in just seconds. Performance-wise, it can be compared to OpenAI's GPT-4 or Google's Gemini, and like those models is "trained" before deployment by ingesting data from the internet.

But unlike those models, developers can access the technology for free, and make adaptations as they see fit for their specific use cases. Meta says that LLaMA 3.1 is as good as the best models out there, but unlike its main rivals, it only deals with text, with the company saying it will later match the others with images, audio and video.

Security threat

In the rivalry over generative AI, defenders of the closed model argue that the Meta way is dangerous, as it allows bad actors to weaponise powerful technology. In Washington, lobbyists argue over the distinction, with opponents to open source insisting that models like Llama can be weaponised by countries like China.

Meta argues that transparency assures a more level playing field and that a world of closed models will ensure that only a few big companies, and a powerhouse nation like China, will be in control. Startups, universities, and small businesses will "miss out on opportunities," Zuckerberg said.

Comments