For corporations I assume their revenue is proportional to f(y) - f(x) where y is cost of their model and x is cost of open source model. Do you think governments would have a substantially different utility function from that?
A government might model the situation as something like “the first country/coalition to open up an AI capabilities gap of size X versus everyone else wins” because it can then easily win a tech/cultural/memetic/military/economic competition against everyone else and take over the world. (Or a fuzzy version of this to take into account various uncertainties.) Seems like a very different kind of utility function.
For corporations I assume their revenue is proportional to f(y) - f(x) where y is cost of their model and x is cost of open source model. Do you think governments would have a substantially different utility function from that?
A government might model the situation as something like “the first country/coalition to open up an AI capabilities gap of size X versus everyone else wins” because it can then easily win a tech/cultural/memetic/military/economic competition against everyone else and take over the world. (Or a fuzzy version of this to take into account various uncertainties.) Seems like a very different kind of utility function.