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The US tried to ban it. djb challenged it on first amendment grounds and the result was that the US government gave up trying to enforce any ban.

AI is different though because these models are private, so they cannot really be considered to be "speech". Although if it were an open model it would likely be protected speech to release it.

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The models are private but the output of the models seems even more obviously speech than the models (or cryptography algorithms) themselves.
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You have to squint to see the output of an LLM to be speech. The input is clearly speech but the government is not preventing anyone from writing or publishing prompts, only from running those prompts through the model.

In the case of the crypto export ban, the government was attempting to suppress the release of cryptographic research. For example, if a cryptographic researcher wrote a paper on a cipher and they included a definition of that cipher in the paper, that was an "export" of cryptography. This is very clearly a restraint on speech that violates the first amendment and after much legal wrangling the government agreed and the issue evaporated.

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Yeah, so how many pages to print Fable?
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They are not exporting the models, they are exporting very speech like output.
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