Why AI2 CEO Ali Farhadi believes the future of AI has to be open source

AI researcher and industry insider Ali Farhadi doesn’t mince words when it comes to open-source artificial intelligence: “Openness is the only way forward,” he says.

Farhadi is a professor at the University of Washington as well as the CEO of the Allen Institute for AI (AI2), one of the most active nonprofit AI research institutes in the nation. The institute has three main areas of focus: Open Ecosystem, empowering others with AI capabilities; AI for scientists, helping them do their work by mitigating the information overload in the science industries; and AI for the Planet, providing tools to protect the environment. 

AI2 has become a leading voice in the industry’s fierce debate over how open new AI technology should be. Farhadi has shaped groundbreaking projects such as foundational AI research (including the first iteration of a language model, eLMo), and AI2 spin-off startup Xnor.ai (bought by Apple in 2020). 

Farhadi was a third year assistant professor at UW when AI2’s founder, Paul Allen, called and asked him to join. Despite being advised to focus on securing tenure at the time, he embraced the role. 

“It was such a unique opportunity that I had, I didn’t need to think twice. So I jumped on it, and it’s been sort of a game changer in my career,” Farhadi says. “In retrospect, this was the best decision I’ve ever made, not only to help my tenure and my research, but also I’ve learned so much doing this that defined my career.” 

Since joining AI2 in 2015, AI2’s startup incubator has sold two spin-off companies: Kitt.ai was acquired by the Chinese search engine powerhouse Baidu in 2017; and Xnor.ai, which specialized in low-power, edge-based artificial intelligence tools, was bought by Apple in 2020. The Xnor.ai deal was around $200 million, and Farhadi actually left to join Apple for a stint. 

He came back as CEO of the Allen Institute in 2023 to advocate for an open approach to AI. “It was an easy decision, and felt like going back home, but also the timing was sort of critical, given how AI was evolving,” Farhadi says.

Under Farhadi’s leadership, AI2 launched OLMo, a series of open language models. Unlike other proprietary models, which often operate behind limited APIs, OLMo offers complete openness by releasing full model weights, training code, training logs, training metrics in the form of Weights & Biases logs, and inference code. 

Every model has publicly accessible code, weights, and 500-plus intermediate checkpoints, supported by tools to trace back to the exact data that was used at that point during training. Underpinning OLMo’s success is the Dolma data set. Publicly available on Hugging Face, it contains a mix of web content, academic publications, code, books, and encyclopedic materials.

AI2 released the latest version of oLMo, OLMo 1.7–7B, as well as its underlying data set, Dolma 1.7, in April 2024. Now scoring a 52 on MMLU, the model sits above Llama 2–7B, approaches Llama 2–13B, and outperforms Llama 2–13B on GSM8K. 

“To me, open source means I should be able to grab what you’ve developed, understand it, change it, and build upon it,” Farhadi says. “Without that, we’re crippling the potential of researchers and developers.”

Farhadi says he is acutely aware of the risks posed by AI, but he insists secrecy is not the solution. “Having these black box solutions where people don’t know much about it would only increase the chances of unintended damage,” he adds. “The biggest problem with AI today is that we don’t fully understand these systems. Opening them up allows millions of practitioners to participate in solving those gaps.”

This story is part of AI 20, our monthlong series of profiles spotlighting the most interesting technologists, entrepreneurs, corporate leaders, and creative thinkers shaping the world of artificial intelligence.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91225845/ai2-ceo-ali-farhadi-believes-open-source-is-the-future?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 3mo | 4. 12. 2024, 13:10:05


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

The best apps to find new books

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. 

24. 2. 2025, 6:20:05 | Fast company - tech
5 tips for mastering virtual communication

Andrew Brodsky is a management professor at McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also CEO of Ping Group and has received nume

23. 2. 2025, 11:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Apple’s hidden white noise feature may be just the productivity boost you need

As I write this, the most pleasing sound is washing over me—gentle waves ebbing and flowing onto the shore. Sadly, I’m not actually on some magnificent tropical beach. Instead, the sounds of the s

22. 2. 2025, 12:40:06 | Fast company - tech
The next wave of AI is here: Autonomous AI agents are amazing—and scary

The relentless hype around AI makes it difficult to separate the signal from the

22. 2. 2025, 12:40:05 | Fast company - tech
This slick new service puts ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Wikipedia on the map

I don’t know about you, but I tend to think about my favorite tech tools as being split into two separate saucepans: the “classic” apps we’ve known and relied on for ages and then the newer “AI” a

22. 2. 2025, 12:40:03 | Fast company - tech
The government or 4chan? The White House’s social media account is sparking outreach

The official White House social media account is under fire for posts that resemble something typically found on the internet forum 4chan.

A post shared on February 14, styled like a Val

21. 2. 2025, 20:30:04 | Fast company - tech