TeMPOraL 2 days ago

My standard reply to such comments over the past year has been the same: you probably want to use Azure instead. A big part of the business value they provide is ensuring regulatory compliance.

There are multinational corporations with heavy presence in Europe, that run their whole business on Microsoft cloud, including keeping and processing there privacy-sensitive data, business-critical data and medical data, and yes, that includes using some of this data with LLMs - hosted on Azure. Companies of this size cannot ignore regulatory compliance and hope no one notices. This only works because MS figured out how to keep it compliant.

Point being, if there are business consequences, you'll be better off using Azure-hosted LLMs than running a local model yourself - they're just better than you or me at this. The only question is, whether you can afford it.

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jackvalentine 2 days ago

I don't think Azure is the legal panacea you think it is for regulated industries outside of the U.S.

Microsoft v. United States (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Corp._v._United_Stat...) showed the government wants, and was willing to do whatever required, access to data held in the E.U. The passing of the CLOUD Act (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CLOUD_Act) basically codified it in to law.

brookst 1 day ago

Compliant with EU consumer data regulations != panacea

TeMPOraL 2 days ago

It might not be ultimately, but it still seems to be seen as such, as best I can tell, based on recent corporate experience and some early but very fresh research and conversations with legal/compliance on the topic of cloud and AI processing of medical data in Europe. Azure seems to be seen as a safe bet.

coliveira 2 days ago

No, Azure is not gonna save you. The problem is that the US is a country in legal disarray, and they also pretend that their laws should be applied everywhere in the world. I feel that any US company can become a liability anywhere in the world. The Chinese are now feeling this better than anyone else, but the Europeans will also reach the same conclusion.

anonzzzies 2 days ago

The US forces their laws everywhere and it needs to end. Everywhere we go, the fintech industry is really fed up with the US AML rules which are just blackmail: if your bank does not comply, America will mess you up financially. Maybe a lot more should just pull out and make people realise others can play this game. But that needs a USD collapse, otherwise it cannot work and I don't see that happening soon.

fancyfredbot 2 days ago

AML and KYC are good things for almost everyone except criminals and the people who have to implement them.

cmenge 2 days ago

Agree, and for the people who implement them -- yes, it's hard, it's annoying but presumably a well-paid job. And for the (somewhat established or well-financed) companies it's also a bit of a welcome moat I guess.

fancyfredbot 1 day ago

Most regulation has the unfortunate side effect of protecting incumbents. I'm pretty sure the solution to this is not removing the regulations!

littlestymaar 2 days ago

Regulatory compliance means nothing when the US regulations means they must give access to everything to intelligence services.

The European Court of Justice ruled at least twice that it doesn't matter what kind of contract they give you, and what kind of bilateral agreement there are between the US and the EU, as long as the US have the patriot act and later regulations, using Microsoft means it's violating European privacy laws.

lyu07282 2 days ago

How does that make sense if most EU corporations are using MS/Azure cloud/office/sharepoint solutions for everything? Are they just all in violation or what?

littlestymaar 1 day ago

> Are they just all in violation or what?

Yes, and that's why the European Commission keeps being pushed back by the Court of Justice of the EU (the Safe Harbor was ruled out, Privacy Shield as well, and it's likely a matter of time before the CJEU kills the Data Privacy Framework as well), but when it takes 3-4 years to get a ruling and then the Commission can just make a new (illegal) framework that will last for a couple years, the violation can carry on indefinitely.

dncornholio 2 days ago

You're just moving the same problem from OpenAI to Microsoft.

fakedang 2 days ago

LoL, every boardroom in Europe is filled with talk of moving out of Microsoft. Not just Azure, Microsoft.

Of course, it could be just all talk, like all general European globalist talks, and Europe will do a 360 once a more friendly party takes over the US.

simiones 1 day ago

You probably mean a 180 (or could call it a "365" to make a different kind of joke).

bgwalter 1 day ago

It's a joke. The previous German Foreign Minister Baerbock has used 360° when she meant 180°, which became sort of a meme.

ziml77 1 day ago

It's been a meme for longer than that. The joke to bait people 20 years ago was "Why do they call it an Xbox 360? Because when you see it you turn 360 degrees and walk away"

brookst 1 day ago

The problem is that the EU regulatory environment makes it impossible to build a homegrown competitor. So it will always be talk.

lyu07282 1 day ago

It seems that one side of the EU wants to ensure there is no competitors to US big tech and the other wants to work towards independence from US big tech. Both seem to use the privacy cudgel, require so much regulation that only US tech can hope to comply so nobody else competes with them, alternatively make it so nobody can comply, we just use fax machines again instead of the cloud?

Just hyperbole, but it seems the regulations are designed with the big cloud providers in mind, but then why don't they just ban US big tech and roll out the regulations more slowly? This neoliberalism makes everything so unnecessarily complicated.

BugheadTorpeda6 1 day ago

It would be interesting to see the hypothetical "return to fax machines" scenario.

If Solows paradox is true and not the result of bad measurement, then one might expect that it could be workable without sacrificing much productivity. Certainly abandoning the cloud would be possible if the regulatory environment allowed for rapid development of alternative non-cloud solutions, as I really don't think the cloud improved productivity (besides for software developers in certain cases) and is more of a rent seeking mechanism (hot take on hacker news I'm sure, but look at any big corpo IT dept outside the tech industry and I think you will see tons of instances where modern tech like the cloud is causing more problems than it's worth productivity-wise).

Computers in general I am much less sure of and lean towards mismeasurement hypothesis. I suspect any "return to 1950" project would render a company economically less competitive (except in certain high end items) and so the EU would really need to lean on Linux hard and invest massively in domestic hardware (not a small task as the US is finding out) in order to escape the clutches of the US and/or China.

I don't think they have the political will to do it, but I would love it if they tried and proved naysayers wrong.

Filligree 2 days ago

Europe has seen this song and dance before. We’re not so sure there will ever be a more friendly party.

kortilla 1 day ago

> you'll be better off using Azure-hosted LLMs than running a local model yourself - they're just better than you or me at this.

This is learned helplessness and it’s only true if you don’t put any effort into building that expertise.

TeMPOraL 1 day ago

You mean become a lawyer specializing in regulations governing data protection, computing systems in AI, both EU-wide and at national level across all Europe, and with good understanding of relevant international treaties?

You're right, I should get right to it. Plenty of time for it after work, especially if I cut down HN time.

kortilla 1 day ago

None of that is relevant for on-prem.

selfhoster11 2 days ago

Businesses in Trump's America can pinky-swear that they won't peek at your data to maintain "compliance" all they want. The fact is that this promise is not worth the paper it's (not) printed on, at least currently.

lynx97 2 days ago

Same for America under a democratic presidency. There is really no difference regarding trust in "promises".