Back safely with the help of leading global artificial intelligence company OpenAI, Sam Altman sees the positive trade-offs of technology rapidly competing with human intelligence.
“Even if we give up something here, we’ll have something smarter than we are, in a sense,” he told tech mogul Bill Gates in a recent podcast conversation. “I will find a new job.”
Altman and Gates engaged in an insightful conversation that yielded profound insights, peeling back the layers of Altman’s perspective on AI and its trajectory. But first, Altman sought to reassure industry observers after last year’s ultimately failed corporate coup.
“Many people commented on the fact that their team had never felt more productive, more optimistic, or better,” Altman said.
Altman dealt with the philosophical aspects of AI and considered a future in which AI surpasses human intelligence. He has previously shared concerns about the socio-economic impact of AI, calling for better regulations to ensure appropriately coordinated AI development.
For Altman, AI will lead to a society where workers can do more work for the same cost, making them more productive for their employers.
“If we make programmers three times more efficient, it means they can do three times more things, not just write, but think about completely different things,” he said.
For Altman, the changes in work dynamics brought about by AI are inevitable.
“What I think is potentially a little scary is the speed at which society will have to adapt and the labor market will change,” he said.
Altman has previously said that what bothers him is “the hypothetical idea that I’ve already done something really bad by starting ChatGPT.” But as much as we worry about the future of those affected by AI, OpenAI is constantly pushing the boundaries of the GPT model, presenting a more robust LLM, a store for custom agents that can easily replace more jobs, partnerships with news sites, and more. there is. Train future GPT-5 models on your content.
Regarding the future of AI, Altman emphasized that AI’s cognitive capabilities will need to take a major leap forward. For him, multimodality – a model’s ability to understand input that goes beyond text and includes images or video – will play a key role in determining which models will dominate the AI race.
But the quality of the output will be the differentiating factor, he said, and “the most important areas of development will be around reasoning ability and reliability.”
Altman and Gates explored the need for a cohesive global regulatory framework for AI, discussing topics of regulatory and ethical constraints. He once again advocated for a balanced approach to international governance, taking into account the far-reaching implications of advanced AI systems.
“For a very strong system of the future, we have been socializing the idea of a global regulator,” he said.
Altman’s reflections offer a multifaceted vision of the future of AI, mixing hope and caution, ingenuity and responsibility. New players in the AI space are challenging OpenAI’s dominance, and regulators (like regular workers) are more worried than ever.
It doesn’t scare Alman.
“It’s frustrating, it’s motivating and it’s fun, but it pushes us to be better people and do things better, faster,” he said.