OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (sama): “You can’t trust a voice you hear over the phone anymore. We just all need to start telling people this is coming”
—into one organization. Microsoft, having already invested $3 billion in OpenAI, poured in an additional $10 billion. Billions more flowed into startups and the stocks of public companies that could plausibly claim AI would supercharge their growth. In March, OpenAI upped the stakes again, releasing an even more powerful tool called GPT-4.is real fear. There’s little doubt AI will make many jobs extinct, as new technology does, even as it creates new ones.
In the wrong hands, these tools could cause even worse problems, launching cyberattacks or causing havoc in financial markets. And if AIs were to become capable of making plans on their own and acting on them—especially if those plans aren’t “aligned” to human values—it’s possible to imagine them deciding humans are obstacles to their goals.
The team from OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT — Sam Altman, left, C.E.O.; Mira Murati, C.T.O.; Greg Brockman, president; and Ilya Sutskever, chief scientist, in San Francisco, on March 13, 2023.The evangelist preaching about risks yet plowing ahead anyway is just one of the dualities that come through in conversation with Altman. He is, with his own opinions about which ones should apply to his company.
How much we’re able to trust the human beings who are “tuning” these powerful machine algorithms—both their intentions and their capabilities—will be one of the great recurring questions of the coming years. In conversation with OpenAI employees across a range of departments, a recognition of AI’s dangers is a near universal talking point.
Of course, it’s hard to argue that OpenAI didn’t play a significant role in triggering what is now unfolding in the industry. “It is a race,” says Tristan Harris, the ethicist who co-founded the Center for Humane Technology, but collaboration among the major players will be key. “We need to coordinate because it’s not about getting OpenAI to more safety. That wouldn’t do anything because everyone else would just keep going faster.
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