> It's easier to produce vulnerable code than it is to use the same Model to make sure there are no vulnerabilities.
I once had a car where the engine was more powerful than the brakes. That was one heck of an interesting ride.
So now we have a company that supplies a good chunk of the world's software engineering capability.
They're choosing a global policy that works the same as my fun car. Powerful generative capacity; but gating the corrective capacity behind forms and closed doors.
Anthropic themselves are already predicting big trouble in the near term[1] , but imo they've gone and done the wrong thing.
Pandora is an interesting parable here: Told not to do it, she opens the box anyway, releases the evils, then slams the lid too late and ends up trapping hope inside.
Given their model naming scheme, they should read more Greek Mythos. (and it was actually a jar ;-)
I once had a car where the engine was more powerful than the brakes. That was one heck of an interesting ride.
So now we have a company that supplies a good chunk of the world's software engineering capability.
They're choosing a global policy that works the same as my fun car. Powerful generative capacity; but gating the corrective capacity behind forms and closed doors.
Anthropic themselves are already predicting big trouble in the near term[1] , but imo they've gone and done the wrong thing.
Pandora is an interesting parable here: Told not to do it, she opens the box anyway, releases the evils, then slams the lid too late and ends up trapping hope inside.
Given their model naming scheme, they should read more Greek Mythos. (and it was actually a jar ;-)
[1] https://thehill.com/policy/technology/5829315-anthropic-myth...