Fable ban was never about a jailbreak?
106 points by amarant 3 hours ago | 17 comments
simonw 2 hours ago
This is a frustrating article - it provides no new information at all to support the claim that it was "never about a jailbreak".
replyI suspect there's more to the story than has been reported too, but I'd like information to help turn those suspicions into something more concrete.
siliconc0w 2 hours ago
I don't see how more advanced models won't get gated to specific known KYC'd entities. Classification-style guardrails will never be sufficient. Distillation attacks too are really hard to prevent. Open-source models can have their guardrails easily stripped away so it'll be incredibly dangerous to continue to release more and more capable OSS models that can and will be used to give bad actors 100x leverage.
replyjdavid 39 minutes ago
This article tries to make it sound like Anthropic is playing 4-D chess and sacrificed a pawn to force a better future outcome.
replyThis seems too simple, and too complex at the same time.
jadar 2 hours ago
I feel like this headline is a bit over-stated. There is not a ton of evidence it was about a jailbreak, and neither was there evidence that is was about retribution.
replydualvariable 47 minutes ago
Ultimately, I bet Anthropic is fine with this because they needed to take Fable down to improve the guardrails (that were getting a ton of pushback) and they consider treating Fable as "too dangerous" to just be good PR hype for them. And they just get a little more anti-Trump "cred".
replycratermoon 2 hours ago
So the article calls it "knowledge gaps". Has technical expertise ever mattered when the law wants to ban or restrict something it doesn't like? The DMCA comes to mind.
reply
Feds freaked over Fable 5 after simple 'fix this code' prompt, not jailbreak (theregister.com) 398 points | 6 hours ago | 223 comments