But the book writer who wrote a detailed, expert book on how to deal with the software ("Photoshop for Dummies"?). OpenAI might be seen as a competitor.
A government would be easier to say all their data isn't allowed to be crawled, so they can sue later or just say no later on when they figure something classified was in there, or simply when they change their mind.
I believe the default response should be 'no, we'll look into it' for anyone, and then carefully let legal take a look at it (gonna be expensive). For the software vendor, too. Although their crown jewels are likely the source code to their product(s).
But the book writer who wrote a detailed, expert book on how to deal with the software ("Photoshop for Dummies"?). OpenAI might be seen as a competitor.
A government would be easier to say all their data isn't allowed to be crawled, so they can sue later or just say no later on when they figure something classified was in there, or simply when they change their mind.
I believe the default response should be 'no, we'll look into it' for anyone, and then carefully let legal take a look at it (gonna be expensive). For the software vendor, too. Although their crown jewels are likely the source code to their product(s).