Comment by geuis

2 days ago

This smells a lot like the misguided crypto export laws in the 90s that hampered browser security for years.

And don't forget the amazing workaround Zimmerman of PGP fame came up with - the source code in printed form was protected 1A speech, so it was published, distributed, and then scanned and OCR'd outside the US - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy#Criminal_i...

  • And don’t forget Thawte which ended up selling strong SSL outside the US, cornering the international market thanks to US restrictions, and getting bought by Verisign for $600M.

  • I hope this time we finally get a Supreme Court ruling that export controls on code are unconstitutional, instead of the feds chickening out like last time

  • I doubt that would work for model weights because they are generated algorithmically rather than being written by humans, which probably means that they are not speech.

  • I for one would love to see model weights published in hardcover book form.

    • What a throwback to the time when some edgy folks would share printed codes in Pascal… I even remember seeing a hard copy of a binary in hex which was best not to execute.

  • It might be somewhat prohibitive to print the model weights for any sufficiently large model, though.

It hampered the security of a lot of things. That wasn't misguided -- that was the point.

China, Russia, and Iran used Internet Explorer too.