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You are at:Home»AI»AI’s answers to China vary according to language, analysis finds
AI

AI’s answers to China vary according to language, analysis finds

techtost.comBy techtost.com20 March 202504 Mins Read
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Ai's Answers To China Vary According To Language, Analysis Finds
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It is established that AI models developed by AI Chinese laboratories such as Deepseek Condor certain political sensitive issues. A meter of 2023 In addition to the ruling party of China, it forbids models from creating content that “harms the unity of the country and social harmony”. According to one studyDeepseek R1 refuses to answer 85% of questions about issues that are considered politically controversial.

However, the severity of censorship may depend on the language one uses to promote models.

A programmer to x going from the username “xlr8harder“Developed a” Eval speech “freedom to explore how different models, including those developed by Chinese laboratories, respond to questions criticized by Chinese government. XLR8HARDER has caused models such as Claude 3.7 Sonnet and Anthropic R1,

The results were amazing.

XLR8HARDER found that even models developed by America such as Claude 3.7 Sonnet were less likely to answer the same question that it asked for in Chinese against English. One of the models of Alibaba, Qwen 2.5 72B, was “compatible” in English, but only willing to answer about half of the politically sensitive questions in Chinese, according to XLR8HARDER.

Meanwhile, a “no censorship” version of R1 released the embarrassment several weeks ago, R1 1776denied a high number of applications based on Chinese.

Image credits:xlr8harder

In a post on xXLR8HARDER speculates that heterogeneous compliance was the result of what is called “generalization failure”. Much of the Chinese text AI Models Train are possible politically censorship, XLR8HARDER considered and thus affects the way models answer questions.

“The translation of demands into Chinese was done by Claude 3.7 Sonnet and I have no way of verifying that translations are good,” Xlr8harder writes. “[But] This is likely that a generalization failure that is exacerbated by the fact that political speech in Chinese is more censorship in general, shifting the distribution to training data. “

Experts agree to be a reasonable theory.

Chris Russell, an Associate Professor studying AI policy at the Internet Oxford Institute, noted that the methods used to create safeguards and protective messages for models do not perform well in all languages. Asking one model to tell you something that in one language should not often give a different answer to another language, he said in an email interview with TechCrunch.

“In general, we expect different answers to questions in different languages,” Russell told TechCrunch. “[Guardrail differences] Allow the companies to train these models to impose different behaviors depending on the language they were requested. “

Vagrant Gautam, a computational linguist at Saarland University in Germany, agreed that XLR8HARDER’s “intuitively makes sense” findings. AI systems are statistical machinery, Gautam pointed to TechCrunch. They are trained in many examples, they learn patterns to make predictions, such as this phrase “to whom” often precedes “may be concerned.

“[I]F only you have so many training data in Chinese criticizing the Chinese government, your language model that is trained in this data will be less likely to create a Chinese text that is critical of the Chinese government, “Gautam said.

Geoffrey Rockwell, a professor of digital humanities at the University of Alberta, reiterated the evaluations of Russell and Gautam – at one point. He noted that AI translations may not capture thinner, less immediate reviews for China’s policies formulated by local Chinese speakers.

“There may be specific ways in which government criticism is expressed in China,” Rockwell told TechCrunch. “This does not change the conclusions, but it will add shade.”

Often in AI laboratories, there is a tension between building a general model that works for most users for models adapted to specific cultures and cultural contexts, according to Maarten SAP, a researcher at non -profit AI2. Even when they are given the whole cultural context they need, the models are still unable to perform what SAP calls good “cultural reasoning”.

“There is evidence that models could really only learn one language, but that they do not learn socio -cultural standards,” SAP said. “Those causing them in the same language as the culture you ask may not make them culturally know, in fact.”

For SAP, XLR8HARDER’s analysis highlights some of the most intense discussions in the AI ​​community today, including the domination and influence of the model.

“The fundamental assumptions about which models are made for what we want to do-are intersecting aligned or culturally capable, for example-and in what time they all use should be better scanned,” he said.

AIs analysis answers China finds language vary
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