104 comments

  • KnuthIsGod 26 minutes ago

    Malta is an important component of Russia's money laundering Laundromat system.

    "Malta’s corruption is not just in the heart of government, it’s the entire body"

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/03/malta-...

    • justshutup123 14 minutes ago

      nobody cares. you dont need to add random propaganda links whenever a country is mentioned.

      • jerrythegerbil 2 minutes ago

        Laundering of CC/Trial Accounts/Enterprise LLM inference is already a HUGE market, leveraged in part for distillation attacks on western AI.

        A whole country’s worth of accounts just got access to a service we know is being laundered en masse and is also the same tech currently propping up many economies at the moment.

        That same country is known for laundering other forms of liquidity. This is par for the course, not propaganda. And it’s going to be a huge problem by November.

      • gmerc 7 minutes ago

        Thanks Ivan

        • bingaweek a few seconds ago

          The overt hatred people here feel for Russians would make an antisemite blush. This is on the same level as calling random people Schlomo.

  • foxfired 16 minutes ago

    We had a mandatory ChatGPT training course at work. You had to sign up in limited space classes. This is a large company, needless to say it was chaos to get a significant number of people to participate.

    I got a spot. We were shown how to copy and paste data from excel and other data sources into the chat interface. We had sample data to work with, there was always someone in class who would say "mine didn't work." The developers in the room asked about codex, the instructor said she wasn't a developer.

    We did get a certificate though. There was nothing they could teach that you couldn't learn by using the free version in your own time. Whatever they are doing with the Maltese government is just to increase the monthly active user count.

  • hbarka an hour ago

    Next, maybe Anthropic can make Sicily an offer it can’t refuse.

  • sidcool 2 hours ago

    All that data on all Malta citizens. Remember, if you're more paying, you're the product

    • zamadatix an hour ago

      Remember, if the government says it's free it almost certainly means the people are actually paying for it.

      • EGreg an hour ago

        Yes and even if you are paying, you’re still the product!

        That’s whats happens in two sided markets. Everyone’s the product.

        The original adage of “if you’re not paying, you’re the product” doesn’t necessarily rule out the converse. The fact that the grandfather comment made a freudian slip makes it funnier.

        • zamadatix 43 minutes ago

          Hear hear! And those who say paying is the only time one has a chance to not be the product should look at getting involved with a genuine charity or volunteer program too. There are no universal rules about this kind of thing.

    • akomtu 20 minutes ago

      Not long ago nearly everyone in the anglosphere had a habit to talk to a pastor, revealing all the dirty secrets under the veil of anonymity. The Church was an incredibly informed organization. Today OpenAI & Anthrophic are re-creating a parody on that tradition: people talk to an AI pastor, under the veil of anonymity, and divulge their darkest secrets.

  • sharpshadow an hour ago

    It’s a voluntary two hour online AI course with 1 year ChatGPT premium reward. Getting AI basics to the people with playground.

    • emsign 37 minutes ago

      Getting free data from every Maltese citizen rather.

  • lpolovets 22 minutes ago

    It's sobering to think that if every single person in Malta -- an entire country! -- signed up for ChatGPT and used it weekly, ChatGPT’s WAU would increase by only a few tenths of a percent.

  • decimalenough 7 hours ago

    It's a one year free trial, after that it costs money.

    • Sophira 3 hours ago

      And only after a mandatory course, if I'm reading the article correctly.

      • alpinisme 2 hours ago

        Honestly depending on how it’s implemented the course could be really socially useful, both for establishing some baseline knowledge that could help avoid some of the pitfalls of too-credulous use of AI and for spurring people to innovate in their local businesses because they’ve been exposed to ideas earlier than would happen “naturally” as ideas just percolate through society

    • emsign 36 minutes ago

      What a great marketing campaign. How huge was the bribe from OpenAI to the Maltese government to sell out their citizens?

  • 627467 5 hours ago

    Openai seems to be fast forwarding the original Facebook playbook: lobbying for regulatory moat and now OpenAI zero[0]

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook_Zero

  • exabrial 2 hours ago

    Gosh how generous of malta government officials to transfer those tax earnings straight to the 1%ers pockets

  • zitterbewegung 8 hours ago

    Would be interesting long term if this sways public opinion about data centers in Malta. I do support though AI literacy in general and this is a good step. Would wonder about the deal in how much this is actually costing Malta if at all.

    • purrcat259 8 hours ago

      Unlikely. Other than the telcos there's only one proper commercial datacentre here. Space is very constrained and the electricity supply stability + summer heat aren't a fun combination

      • SOLAR_FIELDS 2 hours ago

        As a complete layman, I do wonder why you would bother building a datacenter at a place that everyone agrees is going to be basically underwater in the next 50-100 years.

        • rileymat2 an hour ago

          Wouldn’t 45 to 95 years of use be plenty of time for ROI?

        • IncreasePosts 2 hours ago

          You're thinking of the maldives.

    • Yokohiii an hour ago

      What has this to do with AI literacy?

    • preisschild 7 hours ago

      OpenAI is inherently incentivized to sell as much LLM compute as possible, that is not neutral "AI literacy". You don't let tobacco companies make anti smoking education either.

      • charcircuit 2 hours ago

        >You don't let tobacco companies make anti smoking education either.

        Many jurisdictions literally force them to put education on the boxes.

        • zamadatix an hour ago

          Education written by the government, not the tobacco company. Hence why the tobacco companies weren't keen on it.

    • emsign 34 minutes ago

      Data centers in a country that has barely enough water and electricity for its citizens? That is utterly ridiculous. This AI hype is going crazy, it's all an insane joke, right?

  • blfr 8 hours ago

    The subsidies deployed by the industry are so massive I don't even know if consumers need public assistance here. It's kinda like the gov was subsidizing web hosting or basic banking. The price for a regular consumer already barely hovers above zero.

    Just look at this list of services included in Google's AI Pro subscription[1]. Google took everything it could think any consumer might need and bundled for $20/mo. There's even $10 GCP credit (that you can use for AI API calls).

    [1] https://support.google.com/googleone/answer/14534406?hl=en

    • gwerbin 7 hours ago

      It's a ploy to drive adoption. Once it's considered essential they can turn the screws in massive contracts with governments, big enterprises, universities, and public school systems. Probably some genuine competition on price, but the equilibrium price is probably below cost and not sustainable.

    • weird-eye-issue 3 hours ago

      If only it came with YouTube Premium... Most of that list is just AI in existing products which is not all that interesting. You get better value and models through ChatGPT or Claude especially if you are a developer

      • LeoPanthera an hour ago

        It does come with a discount for YouTube Premium.

    • dwa3592 8 hours ago

      Thank you for this comment and holy cow, I have the pro subscription and didn't know it came with that many bells.

    • pishpash 2 hours ago

      That's not close to "everything ... any consumer might need". It's a list of useless things, other than 5TB of storage. Granted, cloud storage typically sells for more than this, so they are offering Gemini for something like -$15/mo.

    • conradev 4 hours ago

      The government does subsidize basic banking, though?

    • ecommerceguy 7 hours ago

      I had a free 3 month trial I just terminated. I deemed it too expensive.

      • loloquwowndueo 4 hours ago

        Free is too expensive? Were you expecting to get paid for using it?

        • esafak 4 hours ago

          It should be understood that he canceled before Google started charging him.

  • rendx 8 hours ago

    > "Malta’s AI for All initiative will offer people of all backgrounds the opportunity to learn how AI can be used responsibly through a course developed by the University of Malta. The course is designed to help people understand what AI is, what it can and can’t do, and how to use it responsibly at home and work. After the course is completed, citizens can access ChatGPT Plus for one year at no cost to them."*

    • dawnerd 7 hours ago

      Gotta get them hooked and reliant on it. It’s why they subsidized the entire software industry to adopt it.

      • 34df 3 hours ago

        OAI really believes LLMs are going to have the same revolutionary effect as personal computers did.... lmao.

        • beering an hour ago

          Yeah, I think we can all agree that personal computers were a mistake.

          • Forgeties79 an hour ago

            Even reading this as a sarcastic comment I’m not sure what you’re trying to say here.

    • julianlam 8 hours ago

      > for one year

      snort

  • ninjahawk1 8 hours ago

    I’m personally not a fan of OpenAI always referring to their model as “providing intelligence as a utility.” Sounds very condescending, are you saying this isn’t something we already have? If that’s the opinion, may be good to reflect on how the models were trained. On millions upon millions of books which no authors were compensated for.

    But that’s besides the point, the whole initiative is self-defeating by design. This isn’t like power, it’s something humans do inherently possess, this is simply a way to amplify what already exists. Intelligent people using AI generally seem to be more productive than when they don’t use it, and lazy or unintelligent people generally see cognitive decline, at least based on what I’ve heard online but I could be wrong on that.

    So saying “this is where you get intelligence” is both false marketing and destructive to OpenAI as a company, since by all definitions, it isn’t true.

    • arcanemachiner 8 hours ago

      > I’m personally not a fan of OpenAI always referring to their model as “providing intelligence as a utility.” Sounds very condescending, are you saying this isn’t something we already have?

      Your body also generates electricity and natural gas. Do you also get upset when energy companies claim to provide these services as a utility?

      • malfist 7 hours ago

        Is the electricity or natural gas that your body produces a defining feature of humanity?

        Does AI actually provide intelligence?

      • raq98 7 hours ago

        "Humans also produce farts" is a new low. Can the AI people be interned or moved to some seasteading libertarian hellhole so the rest of us can live a normal life?

        • archagon 6 hours ago

          I think we’ll need certified human/no-ai communities at some point in the near future.

          • trollbridge 3 hours ago

            My brother is actually moving to one (although that's not the core focus of the community, but they are extremely sceptical of AI there).

            I suspect in a few years it's going to be strange to talk to him and other people there. It's already hard to explain to people that "Yeah, you can have a phone call and it can sound like your dad but it might just be a chat bot."

          • bluefirebrand 4 hours ago

            I'm in, where do we start?

            If I never have to hear anything about AI ever again it will be too soon

    • kovek 2 hours ago

      LLMs are like a search engine that autocompletes. It's a tool.

    • pizza 8 hours ago

      you can say the same thing of the watts in a person too

    • Muromec 8 hours ago

      >I’m personally not a fan of OpenAI always referring to their model as “providing intelligence as a utility.” Sounds very condescending, are you saying this isn’t something we already have?

      We do and we don't. If you would go out there and talk to a random person about elliptic curves and matrix multiplications and whether you hit a performance ceiling in a specific 2x2 multiplication thingy with Karatsuba and wnaf, they would not know half the words, but the lying and flattering machine will be able to hold the conversation.

      The thing will not get all things right and bullshit me about DSTU4145 using normal basis, will lie about A being set to 1 for all standard curves, but it's definitely more intelligence that you can get from a taxi driver.

      If it's not general superintelligence right there for five bucks a piece, I don't know what is

      • 34df 3 hours ago

        None of those things qualify as intelligence.

        Is a calculator intelligent? I can 'talk' to it via pushing buttons.

      • malfist 7 hours ago

        Is a dictionary intelligent?

        • hilariously 7 hours ago

          These philosophical questions are decades if not older https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_room And the answer is "depends on who you ask and how many capabilities it has"

        • Muromec 7 hours ago

          Does the prayer by a kafir not knowing the language in which the prayer is recited get forgiveness?

          I mean, what's the point of this question even. The thing is either useful or fun or it's not. I personally think the whole AI is the work of devil tempting us, but some people would say that about pork sausages and Paulaner and I like my pork sausages with Paulaner.

      • preisschild 7 hours ago

        > We do and we don't. If you would go out there and talk to a random person about elliptic curves and matrix multiplications and whether you hit a performance ceiling in a specific 2x2 multiplication thingy with Karatsuba and wnaf, they would not know half the words, but the lying and flattering machine will be able to hold the conversation.

        Wikipedia has existed for decades...

        • Muromec 7 hours ago

          You can't talk to wikipedia either, but it exists and is helpful, yes.

    • martin-t 7 hours ago

      Then perhaps their signalling isn't meant for you but for people who have to pay those pesky expensive intelligent people like translators, programmers, designers and writers. Those people would benefit greatly if they could rent intelligence much cheaper from companies like OpenAI.

    • delusional 7 hours ago

      > providing intelligence as a utility

      Lol, they are literally just promising to make people fungible. Tale as old as time.

  • martinbfine 2 hours ago

    Welcome to the 1990's internet days redux in the form of AI! Can't wait for the new AI devices and Web 4.0! So exciting!

  • varispeed 8 hours ago

    Can't imagine the size of brown envelope. Handing over your entire nation's thoughts to a foreign company operating under US Cloud Act in normal circumstances would be considered a risk to national security. Why not invest in home grown talent and companies?

    • applfanboysbgon 8 hours ago

      Malta is the size of a small city, I don't think national security or investing into home grown companies comes into play here.

      • phillc73 8 hours ago

        Malta is part of the EU. I am personally very surprised about this partnership, just in the context of data security, privacy and the GDPR. How is the privacy of these EU citizens protected when all their prompts and data is sent to OpenAI? How do these EU citizens submit a request for all their personal data to be deleted from OpenAI records, a right they have under the GDPR with a compliant data processor?

        • Aurornis 4 hours ago

          How is this any different than EU citizens accessing OpenAI, which is already available in the EU?

          Nobody is obligated to use it. It just moves the price to $0 for people in Malta who choose to use it. Same service.

        • beering an hour ago

          I’m very confused as to what you are asking here. Do you think OpenAI does not serve ChatGPT to EU users already under EU law?

        • fock 4 hours ago

          - Malta is selling passports and harboring criminals who kill journalists (we all remember Daphne Caruana Galizia don't we?). - buying votes/parties there would get you 10 times the MEPs you get in Germany or France. - their mayors can veto EU policy... This EU-thing really is democratic!

          so: I doubt anyone has to care about that pesky GDPR if they buy the government of Malta.

        • applfanboysbgon 7 hours ago

          ChatGPT is already available to users in the EU. It already has an EU-aligned terms of service. Not that I'd trust them, because the GDPR has been borderline useless in reality, but there's nothing particularly legally interesting about this offering.

          > How do these EU citizens submit a request for all their personal data to be deleted from OpenAI records

          Probably by sending an e-mail to a designated address, like most services that operate in the EU, but you can read their TOS if you'd like to be sure.

          • varispeed 7 hours ago

            > but there's nothing particularly legally interesting about this offering.

            Care to elaborate or we have become completely apathetic to any display of sleaze?

            • applfanboysbgon 7 hours ago

              I mean, it's just a literal non-event legally. I'm repeating myself here, but OpenAI already operates in the EU. EU users can already use ChatGPT, with some assurances about adhering to GDPR. Offering the ad-free tier to a subset of EU users for free, who could already use the tier with ads for free, doesn't change anything legally in regards to data processing.

              If you want my commentary on the political context, obviously I think it's not very intelligent for nations to be trusting a US corporation with all of their citizens' data. I think the most impactful use of LLMs is going to be their usage as surveillance and propaganda tools, so this is probably not a prudent decision. But legally, as pertains to GDPR, this is not different from the status quo in any way.

    • morkalork 8 hours ago

      Worse than that, it's bi-directional. The model's responses and tuning now influences a whole nation of people.

      • netsharc 4 hours ago

        It's an interesting way to control the population.. let them delegate thinking to systems, and then just control the systems to respond to your (you = government) preference.

        My analogy is using AI is like using a navigation system, you can end up delegating everything to it and drive into a river...

  • emsign 38 minutes ago

    WTF? Corruption?

  • martin-t 7 hours ago

    Surely the deal is beneficial for both sides.

    For OpenAI because they get a lot of money and and for the government because they can keep tabs on how people use LLMs to make sure they're not doing anything naughty.

  • rtlambh 8 hours ago

    A gambling, money laundering and Mafia paradise where journalists are killed for investigating the Mafia partners with OpenAI. A match made in heaven!

    Next, force an eyeball scan on the peasant population.

    • Muromec 7 hours ago

      Eyball scans are already there on the border for other people. So are AI turrets shooting people on sight, just a different border

    • purrcat259 8 hours ago

      Unfortunate thats the reputation we have :(

      • eska 8 hours ago

        I used to work for a hosting company, and all the shady business like exploitation of children and sex workers came from there unfortunately. But that’s because people move their business there for legal reasons, not because of their residents I assume.

  • syngrog66 8 hours ago

    Facts for context:

    Malta has a population of only 550k.

    Everyone in Malta could already, before this deal/plan, and even without it now, use ChatGPT (or any other LLM model/service, whether free or premium.)

    • purrcat259 8 hours ago

      Citation needed. I haven't heard of this.

      I'm Maltese so feel free to be as detailed as needed.

      • collingreen 7 hours ago

        They are saying that the product is already available then implying a government deal on behalf of all citizens doesn't matter because the product is already available.

        • purrcat259 7 hours ago

          Maltese population are historically price sensitive. €20 a month isn't something you easily justify especially with recent cost of living increases.

          So the fact that you get it free after doing some basic due diligence is actually a big deal in the local context.

          • kdheiwns 2 hours ago

            Anyone can use ChatGPT for free already. The vast majority of people using AI as a search engine alternative/chatbot never have any reason to pay. You don't even need an account.

  • mock-possum 8 hours ago

    Smart move, just wish a more ethical outfit was making it.

  • neon_me 8 hours ago

    ... rather than that, they should prepay everyone a few hours of therapy and aroma sticks. A waaay more profit in the long game.

  • musicale 8 hours ago

    What could possibly go wrong?

  • irishcoffee an hour ago

    Nauseating.

    I run local models. They're fun to play with. I get a bit of a dopamine hit when it works.

    They're selling addiction. This is fucking disgusting.

  • sauercrowd 8 hours ago

    TL;DR: they made a course for citizens

  • alfiedotwtf 8 hours ago

    To be honest, PR pieces don’t all need to go on HN, especially when this is probably not news worthy to anyone here except Maltese living in Malta

    • GaggiX 8 hours ago

      I'm not Maltese and I did find it interesting.

      • muwtyhg 6 hours ago

        Could you articulate what part you find interesting?

        • ipaddr 4 hours ago

          I find the small sample size of Malta to be like tests they have done in Iceland. It won't cost them too much and will generate interesting answers

        • GaggiX 4 hours ago

          The fact that a nation provides free access to SOTA models to all his citizen via this partnership, I mean it's not something I have seen before, therefore I find it interesting, also Malta is not too far from me.

        • cj 4 hours ago

          Can you name one private/government partnership that resembles this one?

          I can’t.

  • MagicMoonlight 8 hours ago

    It’s a shame ChatGPT is total trash now.

    • Muromec 7 hours ago

      Thanks CCP for having providing one that is as lying and flattering but cheaper.

  • 1295817 7 hours ago

    The comments here were not sufficiently obsequious towards AI companies, so the submission dropped from the front page to page three in minutes.

    That is how AI boosterism works here.

    • foxglacier 3 hours ago

      How?? Are you saying there's a lot of silent AI-boosters on HN voting it down despite almost every single comment here being non-obsequious? Looks like your model of reality has detached from modelling reality.