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Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: src/blog/hot-take-on-open-source-AI.mdx
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date: 2025-09-15
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tags: open souce AI, tech, policy
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Reference [[make-it-real]]
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Over the last few months I've been in a number of conversations with business executives, media and policy professionals and researchers, who in the sincerest of intentions have said something like "but what even is open source AI" or the scarier version "oh but we don’t have a definition of open source". I think people intend for these statements to be provocations to start a conversation but, in my humble opinion, these become more like confounders.
Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: src/config/research.js
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exportconstresearch={
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featured: [
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{
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date: "4 November, 2025",
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title:
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"Make it Real : Mapping Safety Responses to AI-facilitated Gendered Harms",
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description:
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"A report we worked on with RATI foundation that examines how AI-generated content, popularly known as ‘deepfakes’, is impacting and reshaping online harassment. Drawing from cases reported to Rati's helpline Meri Trustline, the report reveals a concerning trend: while media & headlines often center on celebrities and politicians targeted through AI, a more personal crisis is also unfolding. Ordinary survivors are being targeted through images that are artificially generated but possess the capacity for real harm. Survivors’ reputation is attacked and consent is erased through technology. These violations are muted by shame, fear and trauma- the incidents are rarely revealed to close family circles, let alone feature in larger discourse. ",
"To understand the impact of incentives on online information-sharing behavior, this study created a mock social media platform and found that both financial and social incentives increased the sharing of true information, with demographic factors such as age, education, and political ideology also playing a role.",
"To understand the impact of incentives on online information-sharing behavior, this study created a mock social media platform and found that both financial and social incentives increased the sharing of true information, with demographic factors such as age, education, and political ideology also playing a role.",
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