
AI Safety Talk Is Getting Louder. Is Anyone Actually Listening?
With Anthropic and OpenAI eyeing IPOs and billions flowing into AI infrastructure, a UCLA professor is asking the question the industry keeps sidestepping.
画像クレジット: Image via Bloomberg — Technology. Used under fair use for news commentary. · source
So here's what I keep wondering: when a company is about to go public and suddenly starts talking a lot about safety, is that genuine concern or is that just the roadshow pitch?
I'll be honest, I've been around long enough to recognize the pattern. When I was at Kuka, we'd go through these cycles every time a new safety standard dropped, whether it was ISO 10218 or whatever revision was coming down the pipe. Management would schedule the all-hands, there'd be a slide deck about commitment to responsible automation, and then six weeks later everyone was back to arguing about cycle times. I'm not saying the concern wasn't real. I'm saying it got diluted fast when money was on the table.
Which brings me to what's happening right now in AI.
The IPO Problem
Both Anthropic and OpenAI are preparing for IPOs, and according to Bloomberg Technology, both companies are stressing their safety credentials as part of that process. Fine. That's expected. But Safiya Noble, a professor at UCLA and director of the university's Center on Resilience and Digital Justice, isn't buying the framing. Her position is straightforward: current AI is not safe, and the problem runs deeper than most people want to admit. She's pointing specifically at training data, arguing that stereotypes and biases are being baked in at the foundational level.
That's not a fringe view, by the way. It's been documented in academic literature for years. What's different now is the scale. When you've got Google backstopping Anthropic data centers and Silicon Valley racing to build infrastructure through what Bloomberg is describing as "ever more intertwined deals," the systems being built on potentially flawed training data are going to touch a lot more than just a chatbot answering trivia questions.
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