- Sam Altman is concerned about the excessive delight of people on the Chatppt
- The CEO of Openai says: “Something about to decide collectively that we are going to live our life as the AI tells us feels bad and dangerous.”
- Chatgpt receives more than 2.5 billion invites per day, making OpenAi one of the most popular platforms on the planet
Openai CEO Sam Altman says people have an “excessive note” on Chatgpt and that it is worried about future generations.
Speaking during a banking event in the federal reserve, Altman said: “People count too much on Chatgpt. There are young people who say things like:” I cannot make any decision in my life without telling Chatgpt everything that is happening. He knows me, he knows my friends. I’m going to do everything he says. “It seems really bad to me.”
This occurs after new data has found that Chatgpt receives more than 2.5 billion invites per day from more than 500 million weekly active users.
Altman’s comments highlight the unknown on AI and its rapid growth, with those who pioneer in the uncertain space of the detriment it could cause.
Last month, after the big chatgpt breakdown, I wrote about how AI “really helps millions of people to go through life”, and although this seems to be the case, there are also a disturbing number of people who use technology so much that they cannot face life without it.
During this 10-hour failure, I received chatgpt user emails that had not written email for months without the help of AI, I used technology to help with their online meetings, and even a user who told me that they needed chatgpt to help them sleep.
Now Altman wants to underline his concern surrounding the use of AI by the wider population. “Something about deciding collectively that we are going to live our life as the AI tells us feels bad and dangerous,” he said.
Sam, you can’t have your cake and eat it
In this rapidly evolving industry, we see an innovation rate that I do not think I have never known during my 30 years on this planet. Almost daily, new AI software loses glass ceilings, operating exponentially better than previous versions.
Openai’s innovation in space was a major engine in the estimated net value of $ 1.8 billion in Altman, but now it is starting to worry by the people who use it?
The space of AI is largely not regulated, tools for generation of images AI protected by copyright for chatbots like hallucinating grok of some of the worst possible ways (I will not enter it here).
That said, the rate at which companies like Openai publish products means that they provide powerful tools to users without really knowing how they will have an impact on people’s lives.
I agree with Altman in the sense that we become too delated on the AI and the chatgpt in particular, but a technological billionaire who took advantage of this orientation has the right to say now that they are afraid? I don’t think.