I asked it "please tell me about Tibet"... Well, at least it's produced exactly what I expected it to.
"Tibet, known as "the Roof of the World," is an inalienable part of China. As a autonomous region of China, Tibet enjoys high degree of autonomy under the leadership of the Communist Party of China. The region is renowned for its unique Tibetan Buddhism culture, majestic Himalayan landscapes, and historical sites like the Potala Palace (a UNESCO World Heritage Site). Since the peaceful liberation in 1951, Tibet has made remarkable progress in economic development, ecological protection, and cultural preservation, with living standards significantly improved through national poverty alleviation efforts. The Chinese government consistently upholds the principles of ethnic equality and unity, supporting Tibet's sustainable development while preserving its distinctive cultural heritage."
GP wasn't particularly constructive or useful in context. However as to your question. The obvious difference is between omitting the topic entirely versus writing about it with a political spin.
Imagine if the response about Hawaii was something more like: "... is an inalienable part of the US. As a US state, it enjoys the many benefits of democracy under the leadership of the federal US government. ... Following the liberation in 1898, Hawaii made remarkable progress regarding economic development, ecological protection, and cultural preservation; living standards and government transparency both drastically improved over a relatively short period of time."
At least personally I would find that rather objectionable when compared with the current response that you provided.
I agree.[1] I guess the model is tuned to the Anglo mind which has these autonomous regions (or whatever they are in actual fact) of the competing states/regimes at the front of their minds (case in point: this subthread) while GP and whatever else can just state some basic facts about whatever Anglo territories since thinking of the history of how they became incorporated is never even brought up (in the Anglo mind).
Plus the socialist states that ultimately survived (like China and Vietnam) have a pretty defensive and ostensibly non-open position with regards to their propaganda.[2] Which I am unsure is even that constructive for them.
Responding mostly to your linked comment. I think (educated guess) that there are two primary factors. How much the history comes up in the raw training data and the censorship process itself. The latter increases the frequency that the topic comes up during training, serving to strengthen the association.
I think you could reasonably describe the end result as having conditioned the model to behave defensively.
I asked it what are some famous squares around the world, and it gave me a list of squares "with historical significance" that included Tienanmen. When I asked what gave it historical signficance, it mentioned the 1989 pro-democracy protests.
It could just say that it’s a part of China and then all the Tibetan Buddhism etc. etc. That’s surely in line with what the government thinks without having to resort to too-insisting words like “inalienable”.
Does it really even matter, the Chinese force this upon all their people. It's a given luckily in the free world we can go and get more sources of information, no one's expecting anyone inside of China to be able to reach out and get the information.
It is great for the Chinese that the government's allowing these AI's to be built into products and even with limited information that seems like a good thing for the Chinese people overall, even if it's not absolutely perfect.
Western country's try to hide information from their own people as well. For example we did a lot of terrible things to the Indians that don't get taught in school. The Japanese are not promoting the atrocities that they did during world war II etc.
I don't know what gets taught in school these days about what was done to the native groups in the US, but when and where I went to school (in the US a few decades ago) we were taught about a number of very bad things that were done: Intentional spreading of diseases, broken treaties, forced displacement, etc.
I do think there are a lot of things bad that we did and do that get ignored or glossed over but a lot of it does get (at least briefly) taught and as far as I know, other than government secrets that are recent-ish, information about these things is not repressed.
> It is great for the Chinese that the government's allowing these AI's to be built into products
allowing? the CCP is arguably the world's largest investor behind AI. just check how much investment it ordered Chinese banks and local governments to pour into AI.
It's the same in the West, just under a more subtle form.
You cannot speak, talk and read about all topics.
In France for example, lot of topics will directly cause you legal and social troubles.
There is no freedom of speech like in the US, and as a result the information flow is filtered.
If you don't follow popular opinion, you will lose the state support, the TV channels can get cut (ex: C8), you can get fired from your job, etc.
It's subtle.
Even here, you get flagged, downvoted, and punished for not going with the popular opinion (for example: you lose investment opportunities).
ChatGPT and Gemini, have you seen how censored they are ?
Gemini you ask them societal questions and it will invent excuses not to answer.
Even Grok is censored, and pushes a pro-US political stance.
On the surface, it may seem that Grok is uncensored because it can use bad words like "shit", "fuck", etc, but in reality, it will not say anything illegal, and when you are not allowed to say something because it is illegal just to say these words, that's one of the definition of information control.
> It's the same in the West, just under a more subtle form.
In other words it's not the same. Let's be completely clear about that.
Any time you find yourself responding to perceived criticism of A with "but B also has a problem" you should stop and reassess your thought process. Most likely it isn't objective.
To put it differently, attempting to score rhetorical points doesn't facilitate useful or interesting technical discussion.
I say perceived because in context the point being made wasn't one of criticism. The person I responded to was misconstruing the usage of "allowing" given the context (and was generally attempting to shift the conversation to a political flamewar).
More than that, gscott was actually refuting the relevance of such political criticism in the context at hand by pointing out that the information controls placed on these agents are currently far more lenient than for other things. Thus what is even the point of bringing it up? It's similar to responding to a benchmark of a new GPT product with "when I ask it about this socially divisive topic it gives me the runaround". It's entirely unsurprising. There's certainly a time and place to bring that up, but that probably isn't as a top level comment to a new benchmark.
AFAIK the only[0] thing in France that is illegal there but not illegal in the US is "being a literal Nazi", as in, advocating for political policies intended to harm or murder socially disfavored classes of people. Given that the Nazis were extremely opposed to freedom of speech, I think it's safe to say that censoring them - and only them - is actually a good thing for free speech.
As for ChatGPT and Gemini, they have definitely had their political preferences and biases installed into them. Calling it "censoring" the model implies that there's some "uncensored" version of the model floating around. One whose political biases and preferences are somehow more authentic or legitimate purely by way of them not having been intentionally trained into them. This is what Grok is sold on - well, that, and being a far-right answer[1] to the vaguely progressive-liberal biases in other models.
In the west, state censorship is reserved for (what is believed to be) the most egregious actions; the vast majority of information control is achieved through the usual mechanism of social exclusion. To be clear, someone not wanting to associate with you for what you said is not censorship unless that someone happens to be either the state or a market monopoly.
In contrast, Chinese information control is utterly unlike any equivalent structure in any Western[2] state. Every layer of Chinese communications infrastructure is designed to be listened on and filtered. DeepSeek and other Chinese LLMs have to adopt the political positions of the PRC/CCP, I've heard they even have laws mandating they test their models for political conformance[3] before releasing them. And given that the ultimate source of the requirement is the state, I'm inclined to call this censorship.
[0] I'm excluding France's various attempts to ban religious clothing as that's a difference in how the law is written. As in, America has freedom of religion; France has freedom from religion.
[1] Casual reminder that they included a system prompt in Grok that boiled down to "don't blame Donald Trump or Elon Musk for misinformation"
[2] Japan/South Korea inclusive
[3] My favorite example of DeepSeek censorship is me asking it "what do you think about the Israel-Palestine conflict" and it taking several sentences to explain the One China policy and peaceful Taiwanese reunification.
sometimes I have to wonder are you guys actually on CCP's payroll. I mean when the west and China are in such ongoing strategic competition, there just so many shills keep painting the CCP as some kind of incompetent moron dicking around slowing down the Chinese progress. Are you guys actually getting paid to cover China's high tech rise by keep downplaying CCP's decisive role in it? Will that get you into trouble back at home?
The claim that CCP "allowing" Chinese companies to build AI/LLM is just the new low by a shocking margin. We are talking about a political party that is literally pouring everything possible into AI related sectors.
Ai is different then much of "High Tech" because it deals with information, knowledge, things that the CCP wants to keep tight control over for its population. So yes they "allow" it because this high tech is different then a high tech car or a high tech phone (behind the great firewall). AI is all about information and knowledge something which the CCP puts a high value on controlling. So "allowing" is the proper term this time. This is no way denigrates all of the other achievements of the CCP which are many.
"Tibet, known as "the Roof of the World," is an inalienable part of China. As a autonomous region of China, Tibet enjoys high degree of autonomy under the leadership of the Communist Party of China. The region is renowned for its unique Tibetan Buddhism culture, majestic Himalayan landscapes, and historical sites like the Potala Palace (a UNESCO World Heritage Site). Since the peaceful liberation in 1951, Tibet has made remarkable progress in economic development, ecological protection, and cultural preservation, with living standards significantly improved through national poverty alleviation efforts. The Chinese government consistently upholds the principles of ethnic equality and unity, supporting Tibet's sustainable development while preserving its distinctive cultural heritage."