It's ElReg who, true to their style, decided to focus the discussion on Google employees using (or not using) Google's LLM. Even they, however, acknowledge that Google "also advised users not to include sensitive information in their conversations with Bard in an updated privacy notice."
As such, Google seems to apply the same standard to other users (including "countless /other/ coders") that it applies to its employees, no?
It doesn't have to be a primary use case for it to be one of the use cases Google is putting forward. In which case Google is still saying they're unwilling to use their own tools in the way put forward for others to do so.
What makes you think so? Those LLMs aren't primarily coding tools.
> Leave other LLMs to the side on this issue
https://www.reuters.com/technology/google-one-ais-biggest-ba... indicates that the ban is about "all LLMs, period".
It's ElReg who, true to their style, decided to focus the discussion on Google employees using (or not using) Google's LLM. Even they, however, acknowledge that Google "also advised users not to include sensitive information in their conversations with Bard in an updated privacy notice."
As such, Google seems to apply the same standard to other users (including "countless /other/ coders") that it applies to its employees, no?