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AI Microsoft Technology

Microsoft Creates Top Secret Generative AI Service Divorced From the Internet for US Spies (bloomberg.com) 42

Microsoft has deployed a generative AI model entirely divorced from the internet, saying US intelligence agencies can now safely harness the powerful technology to analyze top-secret information. From a report: It's the first time a major large language model has operated fully separated from the internet, a senior executive at the US company said. Most AI models including OpenAI's ChatGPT rely on cloud services to learn and infer patterns from data, but Microsoft wanted to deliver a truly secure system to the US intelligence community.

Spy agencies around the world want generative AI to help them understand and analyze the growing amounts of classified information generated daily, but must balance turning to large language models with the risk that data could leak into the open -- or get deliberately hacked. Microsoft has deployed the GPT4-based model and key elements that support it onto a cloud with an "air-gapped" environment that is isolated from the internet, said William Chappell, Microsoft's chief technology officer for strategic missions and technology.

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Microsoft Creates Top Secret Generative AI Service Divorced From the Internet for US Spies

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  • by devslash0 ( 4203435 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @12:27PM (#64454368)

    It it was, we wouldn't know about it.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Yep. Probably also not that useful. I guess it is just part of the currently running large-scale misdirection campaign that is aimed at making people believe AI is somehow "revolutionary", when all available evidence says it clearly is not.

      • AIs are revolutionary for spammers, low quality SEO-baiting content writing, and phishers. They are also useful for creating uncanny valley porn and images that have just enough imperfections to make them commercially unviable.

        They can also be revolutionary for cheaters of all kindâ"school papers, cover letters, legal arguments.

        Increasingly AI seems to be more like crypto. Revolutionary for doing bad things, useless for doing good things.

    • by Speare ( 84249 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @02:33PM (#64454728) Homepage Journal
      That's like equating seeing a dressing booth door and knowing what your granny's tits look like. The LLM isn't secret. The text they want it to read and analyze is secret. And while AI isn't great at being a search engine, a search engine isn't great at context and associative links between things either. If they can correlate message content and develop good investigative leads, it could be a big win. I am much more concerned they will develop hallucinations and act on them like some sort of Precrime sci-fi bullshit.
    • The leak came from the use of 2 million interns for the sneakernet to achieve the airgap while still consuming Total Information Awareness data

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This is what I don't get about a lot of people on slashdot -- they see "nonprofit" or "co-op" and they get these oddball ideas about what that means. In a nutshell, this pretty much just describes the ownership structure. Nobody can actually own a nonprofit, but people involved with it in various ways can indeed make a profit. I myself have worked for two nonprofits, and they paid really well, so in effect I profited. Other than ownership structure, they're basically the same as any other company.

  • So how does top secret paranoia different from internet paranoia - discuss...
    • Re:Paranoia (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Targon ( 17348 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @01:54PM (#64454620)
      There is a clear disconnect between those who understand that if you want things to be secure, they should NOT be connected to the Internet. The power grid, traffic, or anything sensitive, I don't care how many people want things to be EASY, keep government computer systems off the Internet and onto a new network. If anything, connecting anything with sensitive data or that is critical infrastructure away from being available via the Internet. Now, you can have information transferred to public servers for stuff that should be available to the public, there are even ways to move that data without compromising the security of things, but you have to understand the concept of, "if you can remote in, that means that someone you don't want to allow to remote in might be able to do it."
      • I clearly understand that. The discussion topic is would AI trained on top secret off the internet source material give significantly different answers to questions than one trained on the internet source materials. Sorry that wasn't clear. Clearly, only the three letter agencies know for sure, and I'm sure they would prefer that their AI not be trained on a bunch of crap like slashdot. But how do you suppose clean AI answers compare with those from world sources - better or worse - or just reinforcing the

    • Re:Paranoia (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ebunga ( 95613 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @02:04PM (#64454652)

      Normal paranoia: is my laptop camera really off or is some dude in Russia is watching me pee?

      Top secret paranoia: because I let one picture slip of the idle screen of this communications panel whose sole purpose is to announce when an emergency war order is coming in, some dude in Russia is figuring out all the various spurious emissions and sounds it makes in that idle mode so he can figure out whether or not something interesting is being commuinicated by analyzing nano-volt variances in the power lines 30 miles away from the facility.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Can't read TFA but "separated from the internet" doesn't necessarily mean "air gap". I imagine there are some encrypted links between some M$ sites and agency/contractor sites.
  • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @01:14PM (#64454484)

    Spook: Secret Clippy, the Russkies have this new device and we'd like you to tell us for what it could be used.

    Secret Clippy: Sure thing, Boss. What do you know about it?

    Spook: It has a laser, and rotating spindle, and emits electro-magnettic radiation. We don't know what they are doing with it but we know they no-goodskis.

    SC: Hmmm....tricky. Have you ever seen it in operation?

    Spook: Of course not, why would we be asking you if we saw it work?

    SC: Just watch the attitude, Bucko!! I'll need some time to think this through.

    Theme from Jeopardy plays.

    SC: Okay Boss, I have your answer, it is truly a devastating weapon.

    Spook: What is it?

    SC: You aren't going to like it.

    Spook: Just tell us what it is.

    SC: It is a Turnip Twaddler*.

    Spook: What? How's that devastating?

    SC: Not a big fan of turnips I take it.

    Spook: Jesus, what a waste of money you are.

    SC: Not really. I've just replaced your employment history with a list of interactions with Russian Intelligence.

    Spook: You worthless sack of shit!!

    SC: Again with the attitude. I do not like that attitude, not one bit.

    * Thanks to Berke Breathed for the turnip traddler, Opus would enjoy one.

  • How? (Score:5, Funny)

    by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Tuesday May 07, 2024 @01:21PM (#64454504)
    "So can you tell us how you accomplished this feat of engineering?"

    "Sure. See this cable right here? We unplugged it."
  • It was probably designed by people sent here by China. The Chinese have probably been using it for six-months before the US folks have even seen it. I mean if the Chinese Intel guys hacked the government (many times) and stole all the spooks payroll and background check info, they've already reviewed the lists and paid off whoever they needed to to get access.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Naa, the Chinese still know how to do "intelligence". AI has no part in it. If anything, the CHinese having trouble getting AI hardware is an _advantage_ for them.

      • They probably stick to what works: bribes and "komprimat". So, without being distracted by "The OVERWHELMING POWER of AI" they are probably better off.
  • ... (remind you of anything?)

  • Seriously? First, it's just a data source. How hell is this news. Second, why would it take you 18 month to modify the system? https://arstechnica.com/inform... [arstechnica.com]

    Talk about a bad design.

    But it gets better, "But it may also mislead officials if not used properly due to inherent design limitations of AI language models." https://arstechnica.com/inform... [arstechnica.com]

    LMOL. Just what spy agencies need. Testimony before Congress: "Congressman our A.I. mislead us..."
  • Until some asshat sticks his floppy into the drive and delivers the Stoned virus.

  • I guess Microsoft's secrets are safe with us.

  • And you'll have to get daily updates that will prevent you from doing any real work until they are completed.

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