It probably means that they don’t scrape and preprocess training data in house. She knows they get it from a garden variety of underpaid contractors, but she doesn’t know the specific data sources beyond the stipulations of the contract (“publicly available or licensed”), and she probably doesn’t even know that for certain.
Funny she didn’t talked it out with lawyers before that. That’s a bad way to answer that.
Or she talked and the lawyers told her to pretend ignorance.
It probably means that they don’t scrape and preprocess training data in house. She knows they get it from a garden variety of underpaid contractors, but she doesn’t know the specific data sources beyond the stipulations of the contract (“publicly available or licensed”), and she probably doesn’t even know that for certain.
“Publicly a available” can mean a lot of things. Is youtube publicly available? Is public broadcasting publicly available?
Maybe, but it sounds very weak.
Lawyers aren’t PR people.
She didn’t even adress them though.