Mozilla: The state of open source AI
Mozilla advocates for an open-source approach to AI development, highlighting successful implementations across various global sectors. The organization argues that open-source models foster competition and prevent vendor lock-in.
In New Zealand's far north, a Māori broadcaster trains speech models for te reo - a language too small for any market - under a license that keeps the data with its people. PwC, one of the largest accounting firms in the world, fine-tuned an open model on the language of finance and runs it today for hundreds of clients, on its own hardware, with no per-token meter running. Researchers in Lausanne built an open medical model with the Red Cross, tuned to its humanitarian guidelines, and are preparing clinical trials at home and in Tanzania. In East Africa, farmers diagnose cassava disease with a model that runs on the phone itself, offline, in fields the cloud has never reached. In Switzerland, a public consortium trained a national model on public supercomputers and released all of it: weights, data, training code. None of them asked permission, and none of them could have rented this. They own it - that is the whole idea.
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