Apertus – Open Foundation Model for Sovereign AI
Executive TL;DR:
- Apertus aims to provide a sovereign AI solution with an open foundation model.
- The project has received mixed reactions from the community, with some praising its idea and others questioning its competitiveness.
- Apertus’ license and data protection approach have also been discussed, with a unique approach to handling personal data.
The Internet’s Verdict: 60% Hyped, 40% Skeptical
Community Reactions
The community has shared various opinions on Apertus, with some comparing it to other open LLMs like Allen AI’s OLMo 3.1 and MBZUAI’s K2 Think V2.
Other fully open LLMs include Allen AI’s OLMo 3.1 and MBZUAI’s K2 Think V2, both of which have released their full training pipelines and datasets.
Others have questioned Apertus’ ability to deliver a competitive model, citing its slow pace and limited progress.
I like the idea, and it has become more pressing that everyone outside the US think about tech sovereignty because the US has become an unsafe place to keep your data, but the impression I get from Apertus is that it moves at the speed of a committee.
License and Data Protection
Apertus has introduced a unique license that allows users to process personal data as independent controllers, with a regular output filter provided to remove personal data from the model output.
The training data and the Apertus LLM may contain or generate information that directly or indirectly refers to an identifiable individual (Personal Data). You process Personal Data as independent controller in accordance with applicable data protection law.
Despite the mixed reactions, Apertus remains a notable effort in the pursuit of sovereign AI, and its progress will be closely watched by the community.
Focus Keyword: Sovereign AI