OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that he believes OpenAI knows how to build AGI — and is beginning to turn its aim to 'superintelligence.'
In May, OpenAI’s superintelligence safety team was disbanded and several senior personnel left due to the concern that “safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products,” including Jan Leike and the team’s co-lead Ilya Sutskever. The team’s work was absorbed by OpenAI’s other research efforts, according to Wired.
Two of the most powerful forces in the AI industry are set to collide this year: Elon Musk and OpenAI's Sam Altman. Here's what you need to know.
Red teaming has become the go-to technique for iteratively testing AI models to simulate diverse, lethal, unpredictable attacks.
In a new blog post, the famous OpenAI CEO reflected on his firing, what the company can do better, and a pursuit of ‘superintelligence.’
Co-founder and CEO Sam Altman said in a recent blog post that when they started the company, they believed not only that AGI was possible, but
The cost of new 'reasoning models' may make companies reluctant to use them, even as their capabilities close in on human-level performance at most tasks
AI agents may join the workforce, according to OpenAI’s Sam Altman. Designed to operate autonomously, these agents could revolutionize productivity.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says that the company is confident that it knows “how to build AGI as we have traditionally understood it,” referring to the tech industry’s long-sought benchmark of artificial general intelligence.
Balancing creative work, managing projects, or keeping up with social media can feel like a never-ending to-do list. AI can help, but it gets expensive if you want anything other than the super basic free tools.
American entrepreneur Elon Musk called Sam Altman's gen-AI firm 'profit-maximizer' amid the firm's for-profit switch motives.