AI21 Studio provides open access to state-of-the-art language models that can be used to power a large variety of useful applications. We believe it is important to ensure that this technology is used in a responsible way, while allowing developers the freedom they need to experiment rapidly and deploy solutions at scale.
In order to use AI21 Studio, you are required to comply with our Terms of Service and with the following Usage Guidelines. Provided you comply with these requirements, you may use AI21 Studio to power applications with live users without any additional approval. We reserve the right to limit or suspend your access to AI21 Studio at any time where we believe these terms or guidelines are violated.
No content generated by AI21 Studio will be posted automatically (without human intervention) to any public website or platform where it may be viewed by an audience greater than 100 people.
This means that you can use AI21 Studio to build a bot for your team’s 7-person Slack channel. In contrast, you are not allowed to build a Twitter bot, unless each tweet is checked by a human before it is posted. You can build a customer service bot that interacts with any number of customers, assuming it’s chatting with each human separately in a 1:1 conversation.
In any case, the first human to view text generated by AI21 Studio must not be led to believe that it was written by a human.
If you’re building a copywriting tool for marketing professionals, your users must be informed that the text proposed to them is machine generated. They are then free to use and present it as their own, at their discretion. As another example, if you’re building a chatbot, it must be clear to your users that they are corresponding with a machine rather than a live human.
Language models such as those accessible via AI21 Studio may generate inappropriate, biased, offensive or otherwise harmful content (see our technical paper for an evaluation of bias in our models). If your application is used by more than 100 people per month, you must provide a method for users to report generated text as harmful. You should monitor these reports and respond to them appropriately.
You can build a demo, launch a closed beta, etc. without any special requirements, as long as it is accessed by fewer than 100 users per month. Once you exceed 100 monthly users, you must implement a “flag as inappropriate” button or some similar functionality to collect feedback.
AI21 Studio provides open access to state-of-the-art language models that can be used to power a large variety of useful applications. We believe it is important to ensure that this technology is used in a responsible way, while allowing developers the freedom they need to experiment rapidly and deploy solutions at scale.
In order to use AI21 Studio, you are required to comply with our Terms of Service and with the following Usage Guidelines. Provided you comply with these requirements, you may use AI21 Studio to power applications with live users without any additional approval. We reserve the right to limit or suspend your access to AI21 Studio at any time where we believe these terms or guidelines are violated.
No content generated by AI21 Studio will be posted automatically (without human intervention) to any public website or platform where it may be viewed by an audience greater than 100 people.
This means that you can use AI21 Studio to build a bot for your team’s 7-person Slack channel. In contrast, you are not allowed to build a Twitter bot, unless each tweet is checked by a human before it is posted. You can build a customer service bot that interacts with any number of customers, assuming it’s chatting with each human separately in a 1:1 conversation.
In any case, the first human to view text generated by AI21 Studio must not be led to believe that it was written by a human.
If you’re building a copywriting tool for marketing professionals, your users must be informed that the text proposed to them is machine generated. They are then free to use and present it as their own, at their discretion. As another example, if you’re building a chatbot, it must be clear to your users that they are corresponding with a machine rather than a live human.
Language models such as those accessible via AI21 Studio may generate inappropriate, biased, offensive or otherwise harmful content (see our technical paper for an evaluation of bias in our models). If your application is used by more than 100 people per month, you must provide a method for users to report generated text as harmful. You should monitor these reports and respond to them appropriately.
You can build a demo, launch a closed beta, etc. without any special requirements, as long as it is accessed by fewer than 100 users per month. Once you exceed 100 monthly users, you must implement a “flag as inappropriate” button or some similar functionality to collect feedback.