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Anthropic accuses Chinese rival Alibaba of illicitly extracting AI capabilities

Anthropic accuses Chinese rival Alibaba of illicitly extracting AI capabilities

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei

US artificial intelligence (AI) giant Anthropic has accused Chinese e-commerce. technology firm Alibaba of "brazenly" and "illicitly" extracting its Claude AI model's capabilities.

In a letter sent to two members of the US Congress. the San Francisco-based company said operators linked to Alibaba carried out almost 29 million exchanges with Claude using thousands of fraudulent accounts in what it called the largest extraction campaign of its kind.

Anthropic urged Congress to penalise the companies behind attacks like this. to ramp up measures to prevent US tech from being stolen.

The BBC has contacted Alibaba for comment and requested more details from Anthropic.

Anthropic's letter, dated 10 June. addressed to US Senators Tim Scott and Elizabeth Warren, accused New York Stock Exchange-listed Alibaba of carrying out "the largest campaign to illicitly extract Claude's capabilities".

According to Anthropic. the campaign was carried out through what are known as "distillation attacks", which extracted answers from a stronger AI model to train a weaker one.

Alibaba-linked operators targeted Claude's most valuable capabilities, including its ability to tackle longer. more complex tasks and its approach to decision-making, Anthropic said.

These type of attacks are carried out on an "industrial scale" to enable Chinese companies to harvest. repackage US AI capabilities as their own, the company said.

The letter also cited other alleged attacks, which Anthropic said posed a threat to the US military.

"Distillation attacks turn hundreds of billions of dollars in American investment. [research and development] into a massive subsidy for our geopolitical competitors," said Anthropic.

It cited the US Department of Defense's claims that Alibaba. several major firms like car maker BYD and tech company Baiduare tied to the Chinese military.

The companies have denied any such allegations. while Alibabathis week sued the US governmentin a bid to get its name removed from the Pentagon blacklist.

US developers havepreviously accused Chinese competitorsof using distillation attacks to train their models to rival American AI technology at a fraction of the cost.

OpenAI has also previously accused Chinese groups of employing the same practice.

Anthropic is a leading AI developer and. alongside ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, isgearing up for a blockbuster stock market debutthat could make it one of the most vaulable companies in the world.

But some of Anthropic's more advanced models. such as Mythos,have raised cybersecurity concernsover their ability to target weaknesses in computer systems.

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Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwyklykn5dwo

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