Meta execs obsessed over beating OpenAI's GPT-4 internally, court filings reveal

Date:

Share post:


Executives and researchers leading Meta’s AI efforts obsessed over beating OpenAI’s GPT-4 model while developing Llama 3, according to internal messages unsealed by a court on Tuesday in one of the company’s ongoing AI copyright cases, Kadrey v. Meta.

“Honestly… Our goal needs to be GPT-4,” said Meta’s VP of Generative AI, Ahmad Al-Dahle, in an October 2023 message to Meta researcher Hugo Touvron. “We have 64k GPUs coming! We need to learn how to build frontier and win this race.”

Though Meta releases open AI models, the company’s AI leaders were far more focused on beating competitors that don’t typically release their model’s weights, like Anthropic and OpenAI, and instead gate them behind an API. Meta’s execs and researchers held up Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s GPT-4 as a gold standard to work toward.

The French AI startup Mistral, one of the biggest open competitors to Meta, was mentioned several times in the internal messages, but the tone was dismissive.

“Mistral is peanuts for us,” Al-Dahle said in a message. “We should be able to do better,” he said later.

Tech companies are racing to upstage each other with cutting-edge AI models these days, but these court filings reveal just how competitive Meta’s AI leaders truly were – and seemingly still are. At several points in the message exchanges, Meta’s AI leads talked about how they were “very aggressive” in obtaining the right data to train Llama; at one point, an exec even said that “Llama 3 is literally all I care about,” in a message to coworkers.

Prosecutors in this case allege that Meta’s executives occasionally cut corners in their mad race to shipping AI models, training on copyrighted books in the process.

Touvron noted in a message that the mix of datasets used for Llama 2 “was bad,” and talked about how Meta could use a better mix of data sources to improve Llama 3. Touvron and Al-Dahle then talked about clearing the path to use the LibGen dataset, which contains copyrighted works from Cengage Learning, Macmillan Learning, McGraw Hill, and Pearson Education.

“Do we have the right datasets in there[?]” said Al-Dahle. “Is there anything you wanted to use but couldn’t for some stupid reason?”

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has previously said he’s trying to close the performance gap between Llama’s AI models and closed models from OpenAI, Google, and others. The internal messages reveal the intense pressure within the company to do so.



Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

Over half a million ‘TikTok refugees’ flock to China's RedNote

STORY: Chinese app Xiaohongshu – or RedNote in the West – saw a spike of new users...

Finland had 12 minutes left to stop a Russia-linked oil tanker from dealing 'much worse' damage to its undersea cables, president says

Finland said a Russia-linked oil tanker was close to wreaking havoc on its undersea cables.Its president said...

New wildfires threaten greater LA area as strong winds develop | Cuomo

Cal Fire Battalion Chief Brent Pascua told NewsNation that California faces a critical 12-hour window of dangerous...

Chinese Barge Usable For Potential Taiwan Beach Landings Seen In Action In New Image

An image has appeared showing a Chinese commercial roll-on/roll-off (RO/RO) ferry linked to a temporary pier via...

Trial starts for West Virginia couple accused of subjecting their 5 children to forced labor

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A witness broke down in tears as she described children carrying heavy objects...

Snow/ice possible next week

Yes, the chatter has begun for potentially another winter storm across the Deep South toward the middle...

Palisades man says wife called 911, fire could've been contained | Vargas Reports

Michel Valentine, a former U.S. attorney for Vice President Kamala Harris, spoke exclusively to NewsNation's Rich McHugh...