AI Tips: Can you also train an AI model? This is how to do it..

Recently, a leaked document related to Surge AI has surfaced. This showed how challenging it is to train large AI chatbots like Anthropic's Claude. This leaked document revealed that to make AI safe and personal, teams around the world have to do very difficult, tiring, and low-paid work.
Who does this work?
Most of the moderators who train these chatbots are from countries like India, the Philippines, Pakistan, and Kenya. These people sit in front of the computer all day and check thousands of messages, which include medical advice, messages with hate speech, objectionable content, and content related to violence. While doing all this, they have to follow very strict guidelines.
Surge AI's guidelines say that employees should avoid harmful stereotypes. But normal jokes are allowed.
Now imagine, when the line between a joke and discrimination is so thin, how difficult it must be for these moderators to decide whom to approve and whom to block. This work is not only mentally tiring, but it also carries a huge responsibility.
Surge AI's clarification
Surge AI says that this leaked document was a research tool. Whose motive was to make AI safer. But this leak also made it clear how much burden is being put on real humans in the name of AI training.
Why is it difficult to make ethical AI?
Making AI ethical is not an easy task. For this, humans have to be taught millions of examples of what is right and what is wrong. These decisions can be different in every culture and country, which makes the matter more difficult. If a moderator gets tired or makes a mistake, then AI also repeats the same mistake.
Hard work behind the scenes
Whenever you ask a question to an AI chatbot and it gives you a clear and safe answer, the hard work of hundreds of people is hidden behind it.
The leak of Surge AI shows that the world of AI is not as easy as it looks smart. The role of humans working in it is most important.
Disclaimer: This content has been sourced and edited from TV9. While we have made modifications for clarity and presentation, the original content belongs to its respective authors and website. We do not claim ownership of the content.