Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Linkedin
  • WhatsApp
  • Associate Journalism
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • 033-46046046
  • editor@artifex.news
Artifex.News

Artifex.News

Stay Connected. Stay Informed.

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • Nation
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Toggle search form
  • Staffer Sacked Over Tweet Against Madhya Pradesh Government: Police
    Staffer Sacked Over Tweet Against Madhya Pradesh Government: Police Nation
  • In New Book, Amitabh Kant Recalls What PM Told Him An Hour Before G20 Meet
    In New Book, Amitabh Kant Recalls What PM Told Him An Hour Before G20 Meet Nation
  • Markets trade lower in early trade on August 8
    Markets trade lower in early trade on August 8 Business
  • Bangladesh Rising Pace Sensation Nahid Rana Confident And Ready For India Test Series
    Bangladesh Rising Pace Sensation Nahid Rana Confident And Ready For India Test Series Sports
  • Suryakumar Yadav To Miss First Two Games Of IPL 2024? Report Makes Big Claim
    Suryakumar Yadav To Miss First Two Games Of IPL 2024? Report Makes Big Claim Sports
  • “Extremely Difficult But…”: Travis Head On India Ahead Of Border-Gavaskar Trophy
    “Extremely Difficult But…”: Travis Head On India Ahead Of Border-Gavaskar Trophy Sports
  • Fire breaks out at London’s Somerset House, home to priceless works by Van Gogh, Cezanne
    Fire breaks out at London’s Somerset House, home to priceless works by Van Gogh, Cezanne World
  • Spain Coach Apologises For Applauding Controversial Luis Rubiales Speech
    Spain Coach Apologises For Applauding Controversial Luis Rubiales Speech Sports
What happens when public knowledge is created on private infrastructure?

What happens when public knowledge is created on private infrastructure?

Posted on November 11, 2025 By admin


Over the past year, a considerable amount of recognition for machine learning (ML) has gone to researchers working in or alongside large technology firms, even as recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) have been financed and built on corporate infrastructure.

In 2024, the Nobel Foundation awarded the physics prize to John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton for contributions that enabled learning with artificial neural networks, and the chemistry prize to Demis Hassabis and John Jumper for protein structure prediction (alongside David Baker’s computational design). Mr. Hassabis and Mr. Jumper were employed at Google DeepMind at the time of the award; Mr. Hinton had spent a decade at Google before departing in 2023. These affiliations don’t erase the laureates’ academic histories but they do indicate where prize-level research is now being performed.

This change rests on material conditions as well as ideas. State-of-the-art models depend on large computing clusters, curated data, and engineering teams. Google’s programme to develop tensor-processing units (TPU) for its data centres shows how fixed capital can become a scientific input rather than only an information technology cost. Microsoft’s multiyear financing and Azure supercomputers for OpenAI reflect the same political economy from a different angle.

Case for public access

Any research with public provenance should return to the public domain. In this context, public money has supported early theoretical work, academic posts, fellowships, shared datasets, publishing infrastructure, and often the researchers themselves. In parallel, the points at which the value became excludable lay increasingly downstream: with respect to computing resources (shortened as compute), this includes rights to data and code, the ability to deploy models at scale, and decisions to release or withhold weights. This helps explain why recent Nobel laureates have been situated in corporate laboratories and why frontier systems are predominantly trained on private cloud systems.

In the 20th century, firms such as Bell Labs and IBM hosted prize-winning basic research. However, much of the knowledge then moved through reproducible publications and open benchmarks. Today, reproducing the work of Mr. Jumper, for example, can require large compute budgets and specialised operations expertise. As a result the concern isn’t only that corporations receive prizes but that the path from a public insight to a working system is infrastructure and contracts controlled by a few firms.

The involvement of public funds should thus create concrete obligations at points where technology becomes enclosed for private control. If an academic laboratory accepts a public grant, the deliverables should include the artefacts that make the work usable, including the training code, evaluation suites, and weights in the AI models to be released under open licences. If a public agency buys cloud credits or commissions model development, procurement should require that the benchmarks and improvements flow back to the commons rather than become locked into a vendor.

Remove bottlenecks

The argument isn’t that corporate laboratories can’t do fundamental science; they clearly can. The claim is that public policy should reduce the structural advantages of private control. Consider the release of Google DeepMind’s AlphaFold 2, which, together with its code and public access to predictions, allowed researchers beyond the originating lab to run the system on (reasonably) standard hardware, retrieve large numbers of precomputed structures, and integrate their results into routine workflows. All this work was supported by public institutions that were willing to host and maintain the resources.

Where the corporate stack is indispensable, such as when training frontier models (with billions or trillions of parameters), claims about ‘responsible release’ often ironically translate to a closed release. Instead, a more consistent position should be to link risk management to a structured model of openness — perhaps one that includes staged releases, access to weights, open penetration testing tools, and a clear separation between safety rationales and business models — rather than allow private entities to resort to blanket secrecy in the name of safety.

The same logic applies to compute: that is, if computing resources become a scientific bottleneck, they should be treated as a public utility. National and regional compute commons should allocate resources for free or at-cost to academic groups, nonprofits, and small firms, and qualify them on open deliverables and safety practices. The ultimate goal is to restore the ability of public institutions to reproduce, test, and extend leading ML work without having to seek corporate permission. Without such a commons, however, publicly funded ideas will continue to be turned into working systems on private clouds and returned to the public as expensive information products.

Indeed, while it’s tempting to treat the entities employing the laureates and funding pipelines as separate issues, one symbolic and the other structural, they’re connected by the computing resources. The fact that the Nobel laureates worked at Google DeepMind reflects where teams with ML scientists, domain experts, data, and compute now operate. Likewise, the fact that the most visible systems of the past two years were trained on Microsoft Azure under a financing agreement explains who could attempt such training. Both facts reflect underlying resource concentrations.

Beyond industry vs academia

Public agencies’ response should be direct — by, say, tying funding to openness in grants and procurement and requiring detailed funding disclosures and compute-cost accounting in research papers. Where full openness would create unacceptable risks, agencies can use equity or royalties to fund compute and data commons that support the wider ecosystem. For corporate laboratories, on the other hand, their credibility should rest on measurable contributions to the commons.

Journalists and the publics should also move beyond an ‘industry versus academia’ framing.

The relevant questions are who sets the research agenda, who controls infrastructure, who can reproduce results, and who benefits from deploying the resulting AI models. Interpreting the 2024 Nobel Prizes as industry victories alone would miss the point that the knowledge base is cumulative and relies on public inputs, while the capacity to operationalise that knowledge is clustered. Articulating this pattern allows us to recognise scientific merit while demanding reforms that ensure public inputs produce public returns — in code, data, weights, benchmarks, and access to compute.

To be sure, the central conclusion isn’t resentment about corporate salaries but responding to the fact that breakthroughs are increasingly occurring at the intersection of public knowledge and private infrastructure. The policy programme should be to reunite the layers where public and private enterprises diverge — artefacts, datasets, and compute — and to bake this expectation into contracts and norms that govern research.

In these conditions, future awards can be celebrated with corresponding public benefit because the outputs that make the science usable will be returned to the public.

Published – November 11, 2025 06:45 am IST



Source link

Science

Post navigation

Previous Post: Trump says U.S. getting close to reaching a trade deal with India
Next Post: Sergio Gor sworn-in as U.S. Ambassador to India

Related Posts

  • Google’s Willow quantum processor — how it works, why it matters
    Google’s Willow quantum processor — how it works, why it matters Science
  • Cyclone Fengal was unusually hard to predict and track | Analysis
    Cyclone Fengal was unusually hard to predict and track | Analysis Science
  • UN report finds countries’ emission reductions short of Paris goal
    UN report finds countries’ emission reductions short of Paris goal Science
  • Beliefs could delay cancer screening and care in Meghalaya, study finds
    Beliefs could delay cancer screening and care in Meghalaya, study finds Science
  • Samples of India’s only active mud volcano in Andaman date back to 23 million years: GSI
    Samples of India’s only active mud volcano in Andaman date back to 23 million years: GSI Science
  • Infosys Science Foundation announces prize winners for 2024
    Infosys Science Foundation announces prize winners for 2024 Science

More Related Articles

Can resveratrol-copper be used to prevent metastasis without trials? Can resveratrol-copper be used to prevent metastasis without trials? Science
Why airlines cancel flights after volcanic eruptions Why airlines cancel flights after volcanic eruptions Science
Why is WHO cagey about publishing Meghalaya polio case details Why is WHO cagey about publishing Meghalaya polio case details Science
White House directs NASA to create time standard for the moon White House directs NASA to create time standard for the moon Science
Why NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams may be stuck in space until next year Why NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams may be stuck in space until next year Science
Chip that steers terahertz beams sets stage for 6G internet Chip that steers terahertz beams sets stage for 6G internet Science
SiteLock

Archives

  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022

Categories

  • Business
  • Nation
  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Recent Posts

  • Vigilant civic society partnered with courts to drive progress in gender justice: CJI
  • Photographers from Gaza Strip, Syria, India win top honours at Gulf region’s top photography event
  • Over 600 detained in 500 search operations across Kashmir: police
  • 42 feared dead in migrant shipwreck off Libya: UN
  • Govt approves Export Promotion Mission with outlay of ₹25,060 crore for six years

Recent Comments

  1. dfb{{98991*97996}}xca on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  2. "dfbzzzzzzzzbbbccccdddeeexca".replace("z","o") on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  3. 1}}"}}'}}1%>"%>'%> on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  4. bfg6520<s1﹥s2ʺs3ʹhjl6520 on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  5. pHqghUme9356321 on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  • Access Denied World
  • Byju’s suspended RP, former promoters move appellate tribunal NCLAT
    Byju’s suspended RP, former promoters move appellate tribunal NCLAT Business
  • Seven more patients, including 4 children, die at Maharashtra’s Nanded hospital, 31 deaths in 48 hours
    Seven more patients, including 4 children, die at Maharashtra’s Nanded hospital, 31 deaths in 48 hours Nation
  • Repco Home Finance eyes AUM ₹20,000 cr. by FY27
    Repco Home Finance eyes AUM ₹20,000 cr. by FY27 Business
  • Paris Paralympics 2024: Avani Lekhara Finishes Fifth In Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Positions Final
    Paris Paralympics 2024: Avani Lekhara Finishes Fifth In Women’s 50m Rifle 3 Positions Final Sports
  • On the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna | Explained
    On the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna | Explained World
  • Pakistan Star, Waiting For His 1st ODI Cap, Told You Already Made Debut, Won’t Be Getting Cap
    Pakistan Star, Waiting For His 1st ODI Cap, Told You Already Made Debut, Won’t Be Getting Cap Sports
  • PM Modi At Constitution Day Event
    PM Modi At Constitution Day Event Nation

Editor-in-Chief:
Mohammad Ariff,
MSW, MAJMC, BSW, DTL, CTS, CNM, CCR, CAL, RSL, ASOC.
editor@artifex.news

Associate Editors:
1. Zenellis R. Tuba,
zenelis@artifex.news
2. Haris Daniyel
daniyel@artifex.news

Photograher:
Rohan Das
rohan@artifex.news

Artifex.News offers Online Paid Internships to college students from India and Abroad. Interns will get a PRESS CARD and other online offers.
Send your CV (Subjectline: Paid Internship) to internship@artifex.news

Links:
Associate Journalism
About Us
Privacy Policy

News Links:
Breaking News
World
Nation
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Lifestyle

Registered Office:
72/A, Elliot Road, Kolkata - 700016
Tel: 033-22277777, 033-22172217
Email: office@artifex.news

Editorial Office / News Desk:
No. 13, Mezzanine Floor, Esplanade Metro Rail Station,
12 J. L. Nehru Road, Kolkata - 700069.
(Entry from Gate No. 5)
Tel: 033-46011099, 033-46046046
Email: editor@artifex.news

Copyright © 2023 Artifex.News Newsportal designed by Artifex Infotech.