Nvidia says it will stop selling GPUs to companies engaging in unethical AI projects.
“We only sell to customers that do good,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told journalists on Wednesday. “If we believe that a customer is using our products to do harm, we would surely cut that off."
Nvidia's GPUs have played a pivotal role in developing ChatGPT, which is taking the world by storm. The AI-powered chatbot from OpenAI was reportedly(Opens in a new window) trained using the help of tens of thousands of Nvidia A100 chips, which can individually cost around $10,000.
The arrival of ChatGPT has shown that “generative AI” programs may forever change society—for both good and bad. For example, it’s not hard to imagine existing and next-generation AI programs being abused to spread propaganda, create deepfakes, or pump out malware capable of hacking computer systems.
In response, Nvidia’s Huang says his company will pull the plug on companies found misusing its GPUs for malicious AI programs. However, he notes “it’s harder” for Nvidia to quickly crack down since Nvidia only supplies the components to buyers. It doesn’t directly run generative AI programs for consumers, like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google are doing.
Jensen also didn’t mention under what specific situations Nvidia would cut off a customer’s access to the company’s GPUs. Some groups, including the developers of the right-wing, free speech social network Gab, plan on creating their own AI-powered chatbots, but want to remove any guardrails on what the programs can say.
“If we don’t build and gain ground now, our enemies will dominate this powerful tool and use it for evil,” Gab founder Andrew Torba wrote in a January blog post(Opens in a new window). "We need to
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