This afternoon I was lucky to attend a talk at the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society by esteemed cryptography and security guru Bruce Schneier. He spoke about “Integrous systems design” and how to build artificially intelligent systems that provide not just availability and confidentiality, but also the assurance that systems will exhibit correct behaviour which can be verified.
One interesting project mentioned in the talk is Apertus, a Swiss large language model (LLM) which was developed by three universities with government funding, without a profit motive, and without copyright infringement in the training data:
Apertus was developed with due consideration to Swiss data protection laws, Swiss copyright laws, and the transparency obligations under the EU AI Act. Particular attention has been paid to data integrity and ethical standards: the training corpus builds only on data which is publicly available. It is filtered to respect machine-readable opt-out requests from websites, even retroactively, and to remove personal data, and other undesired content before training begins.
I will give it a try and see if I can find any behaviours that differ systemically from Gemini and ChatGPT.
P.S. As an added bit of Bruce Schneier-ishness, when he signed my copy of Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship he included a grid of letters which decode pretty easily into a simple message:
O H O E
O E Y N
K B T J
It’s just a Transposition Cipher (an anagram), and one which follows a simple pattern.


