this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2024
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[–] [email protected] 16 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Anonymous or not, you're still feeding it data

[–] [email protected] 16 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/aichat/ai-chat-privacy/

your conversations are not used to train chat models by DuckDuckGo or the underlying model providers

[–] [email protected] 31 points 5 months ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

These companies absolutely collect the prompt data and user session behavior. Who knows what kinda analytics they can use it for at any time in the future, even if it's just assessing how happy the user was with the answers based on response. But having it detached from your person is good. Unless they can identify you based on metrics like time of day, speech patterns, etc

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

Prompt data is pointless and useless without a human to create a feedback loop for it, at which point it wouldn't have context anyway. Also human effort to correct spelling dnd other user errors at the outset anyway. Hugely pointless and unreliable.

Not to mention, what good would it do for training? It wouldn't help the model at all.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

You can collect the data and figure out how to use it later. Just look at the Google leaks lately and what they collect, it's literally everything down to the length of clicks and full walks through the site

Collecting data about user interests is in itself valuable, and it's plausible to use various metrics to analyze it, something as simple as sentiment analysis, which has been broadly done. Sentiment analysis has predated modern ML by a long margin, but you can read the wiki page on that

But yeah just think about stuff like Google trends, tracking interest in topics, as an example of what such data could be used for. And deanonymizing the inputs is probably possible to some degree, aside from the obvious trust we place in DDG as a centralized failure point

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

You're confusing analytics with direct input storage and reuse of prompt data to train somehow, as in your original comment.

Analytics has absolutely nothing to do with their model usage and training, and would pointless. Observing keywords and interests is standard analysis stuff. I don't even think anyone even cares about it anymore.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I'm curious, how does it work?

[–] [email protected] 20 points 5 months ago

Not who you asked but you don't want your AI to train itself based on the questions random users ask because it could introduce incorrect or offensive information. For this reason llms are usually trained and used in a separate step. If a user gave the llms private information you wouldn't want it to learn that information and pass it on to other users so there are protections in place usually to stop it from learning new things while just processing requests.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Not really. Depending on the implementation.

It's not like ddg is going to keep training their own version of llama or mistral

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 months ago (2 children)

I think they mean that a lot of careless people will give the AIs personally identifiable information or other sensitive information. Privacy and security are often breached due to human error, one way or another.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago

But that's a human error as you said, the only way to fix it is by using it correctly as an user. AI is a tool and it should be handled correctly like any other tool, be it a knife, a car, a password manager, a video recording program, a bank app or whatever.

I think a bigger issue here is that many people don't care about their personal information as much as their lives.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 5 months ago (1 children)

But these open models don't really take new input into their models at any point. They don't normally do that type of inference training.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

That's true, but no way for us to know that these companies aren't storing queries in plaintext on their end (although they would run out of space pretty fast if they did that)

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 months ago

It's true. But I trust them more than closedai or Ms at least