William Saunders, a former research engineer at the startup, concerned about who
will make safety decisions
OpenAI’s plan to become a for-profit company could encourage the artificial
intelligence startup to cut corners on safety, a whistleblower has warned.
William Saunders, a former research engineer at OpenAI, told the Guardian he was
concerned by reports that the ChatGPT developer is preparing to change its
corporate structure and will no longer be controlled by its non-profit board.
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Tag - Sam Altman
Reported move follows recent departure of several senior figures from ChatGPT
developer
OpenAI is reportedly pushing ahead with plans to become a for-profit company, as
more senior figures left the ChatGPT developer after the surprise exit of its
chief technology officer, Mira Murati.
The San Francisco-based startup is preparing to change its corporate structure
as it seeks $6.5bn (£4.9bn) of new funding, according to reports.
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The rise of artificial intelligence has sparked a panic about computers gaining
power over humankind. But the real threat comes from falling for the hype
In Arthur C Clarke’s short story The Nine Billion Names of God, a sect of monks
in Tibet believes humanity has a divinely inspired purpose: inscribing all the
various names of God. Once the list was complete, they thought, he would bring
the universe to an end. Having worked at it by hand for centuries, the monks
decide to employ some modern technology. Two sceptical engineers arrive in the
Himalayas, powerful computers in tow. Instead of 15,000 years to write out all
the permutations of God’s name, the job gets done in three months. As the
engineers ride ponies down the mountainside, Clarke’s tale ends with one of
literature’s most economical final lines: “Overhead, without any fuss, the stars
were going out.”
It is an image of the computer as a shortcut to objectivity or ultimate meaning
– which also happens to be, at least part of, what now animates the fascination
with artificial intelligence. Though the technologies that underpin AI have
existed for some time, it’s only since late 2022, with the emergence of OpenAI’s
ChatGPT, that the technology that approached intelligence appeared to be much
closer. In a 2023 report by Microsoft Canada, president Chris Barry proclaimed
that “the era of AI is here, ushering in a transformative wave with potential to
touch every facet of our lives”, and that “it is not just a technological
advancement; it is a societal shift”. That is among the more level-headed
reactions. Artists and writers are panicking that they will be made obsolete,
governments are scrambling to catch up and regulate, and academics are debating
furiously.
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Sam Altman’s ChatGPT promises to transform the global economy. But it also poses
an enormous threat. Here, a scientist who appeared with Altman before the US
Senate on AI safety flags up the danger in AI – and in Altman himself
On 16 May 2023, Sam Altman, OpenAI’s charming, softly spoken, eternally
optimistic billionaire CEO, and I stood in front of the US Senate judiciary
subcommittee meeting on AI oversight. We were in Washington DC, and it was at
the height of AI mania. Altman, then 38, was the poster boy for it all.
Raised in St Louis, Missouri, Altman was the Stanford dropout who had become the
president of the massively successful Y Combinator startup incubator before he
was 30. A few months before the hearing, his company’s product ChatGPT had taken
the world by storm. All through the summer of 2023, Altman was treated like a
Beatle, stopping by DC as part of a world tour, meeting prime ministers and
presidents around the globe. US Senator Kyrsten Sinema gushed: “I’ve never met
anyone as smart as Sam… He’s an introvert and shy and humble… But… very good at
forming relationships with people on the Hill and… can help folks in government
understand AI.” Glowing portraits at the time painted the youthful Altman as
sincere, talented, rich and interested in nothing more than fostering humanity.
His frequent suggestions that AI could transform the global economy had world
leaders salivating.
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