OpenAI、ティーン向け安全対策のためのオープンソースツールを追加
OpenAIは、開発者が青少年向けに安全なAIを構築するための支援として、オープンソースのポリシーツールを提供し始めた。
キーポイント
青少年向けAI安全対策の支援
OpenAIが開発者向けに、青少年の安全を考慮したAI構築を支援するオープンソースツールを提供し始めた。
開発効率の向上
開発者は一から安全対策を考えるのではなく、提供されたポリシーを活用して製品を強化できる。
業界標準への貢献
OpenAIの取り組みは、AI業界全体の青少年向け安全基準の確立に寄与する可能性がある。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この取り組みは、AI開発における青少年保護の実践的なフレームワークを提供し、業界全体の安全基準向上に寄与する可能性がある。特に中小開発者にとっては、リソースを節約しながら安全対策を実装できる点で意義が大きい。
編集コメント
AIの青少年向け安全対策が具体的なツールとして提供されることで、業界全体の実践が加速する可能性がある。ただし、提供内容の詳細な技術的革新性については記事からは不明瞭。
OpenAI、ティーン向けの安全性を実装する開発者を支援するオープンソースツールを追加
開発者は、AIをティーンにより安全にする方法を一から検討する代わりに、これらのポリシーを活用して自らの構築物を強化できます。
原文を表示
OpenAI said Tuesday it is releasing a set of prompts that developers can use to make their apps safer for teens. The AI lab said the set of teen safety policies can be used with its open-weight safety model known as gpt-oss-safeguard.
Rather than working from scratch to figure out how to make AI safer for teens, developers can use these prompts to fortify what they build. They address issues like graphic violence and sexual content, harmful body ideals and behaviors, dangerous activities and challenges, romantic or violent role play, and age-restricted goods and services.
These safety policies are designed as prompts, making them easily compatible with other models besides gpt-oss-safeguard, though they’re probably most effective within OpenAI’s own ecosystem.
To write these prompts, OpenAI said it worked with AI safety watchdogs Common Sense Media and everyone.ai.
“These prompt-based policies help set a meaningful safety floor across the ecosystem, and because they’re released as open source, they can be adapted and improved over time,” said Robbie Torney, head of AI & Digital Assessments at Common Sense Media, in a statement.
OpenAI noted in its blog that developers, including experienced teams, often struggle to translate safety goals into precise, operational rules.
“This can lead to gaps in protection, inconsistent enforcement, or overly broad filtering,” the company wrote. “Clear, well-scoped policies are a critical foundation for effective safety systems.”
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OpenAI admits that these policies aren’t a solution to the complicated challenges of AI safety. But it builds off its previous efforts, including product-level safeguards such as parental controls and age prediction. Last year, OpenAI updated guidelines for its large language models — known as Model Spec — to tackle how its AI models should behave with users under 18.
OpenAI doesn’t have the cleanest track record itself, however. The company is facing several lawsuits filed by the families of people who died by suicide after extreme ChatGPT use. These dangerous relationships often form after the user eclipses the chatbot’s safeguards, and no model’s guardrails are fully impenetrable. Still, these policies are at least a step forward, especially since it can help indie developers.
Amanda Silberling is a senior writer at TechCrunch covering the intersection of technology and culture. She has also written for publications like Polygon, MTV, the Kenyon Review, NPR, and Business Insider. She is the co-host of Wow If True, a podcast about internet culture, with science fiction author Isabel J. Kim. Prior to joining TechCrunch, she worked as a grassroots organizer, museum educator, and film festival coordinator. She holds a B.A. in English from the University of Pennsylvania and served as a Princeton in Asia Fellow in Laos.
You can contact or verify outreach from Amanda by emailing amanda@techcrunch.com or via encrypted message at @amanda.100 on Signal.
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