Sam Altman: Who is the man behind ChatGPT and Worldcoin?
As
the CEO of OpenAI, Sam Altman, perhaps more than any other single figure, has
come to serve as a face for a new crop of AI products that can generate images
and texts in response to user prompts.
Those who know Altman have described him as a brilliant thinker, someone who makes prescient bets and has even been called “a startup Yoda.”
In interviews this
year, Altman has presented himself as someone who is mindful of the risks posed
by AI and even “a little bit scared” of the technology. He and his company have
pledged to move forward responsibly.
“If anyone knows where this is going, it’s Sam,” Brian Chesky, the CEO of Airbnb, wrote in a post about Altman for the latter’s inclusion this year on Time’s list of the 100 most influential people.
“But Sam also knows that he doesn’t
have all the answers. He often says, ‘What do you think? Maybe I’m wrong?’
Thank God someone with so much power has so much humility.”
Others
want Altman and OpenAI to move more cautiously. Elon Musk, who helped found
OpenAI before breaking from the group, joined dozens of tech leaders,
professors and researchers in signing a letter calling for artificial
intelligence labs like OpenAI to stop the training of the most powerful AI
systems for at least six months, citing “profound risks to society and
humanity.”
Altman
has said he agreed with parts of the letter. “I think moving with caution and
an increasing rigor for safety issues is really important,” Altman said at an
event last month. “The letter I don’t think was the optimal way to address it.”
OpenAI
declined to make anyone available for an interview for this story.
The next Bill Gates
The
success of ChatGPT may have brought Altman greater public attention, but he has
been a well-known figure in Silicon Valley for years.
Prior
to co-founding OpenAI with Musk in 2015, Altman, a Missouri native, studied
computer science at Stanford University, only to drop out to launch Loopt, an
app that helped users share their locations with friends and get coupons for
nearby businesses.
In
2005, Loopt was part of the first batch of companies at Y Combinator, a
prestigious tech accelerator. Paul Graham, who co-founded Y Combinator, later
described Altman as “a very unusual guy.”
“Within
about three minutes of meeting him, I remember thinking ‘Ah, so this is what
Bill Gates must have been like when he was 19,’” Graham wrote in a post in
2006.
Loopt
was acquired in 2012 for about $43 million. Two years later, Altman took over
from Graham as president of Y Combinator. The position allowed Altman to
connect him with numerous powerful figures in the tech industry. He remained at
the helm of the accelerator until 2019.
Margaret
O’Mara, a tech historian and professor at the University of Washington, told
CNN that Altman “has long been admired as a thoughtful, significant guy and in
the remarkably small number of powerful people who are kind of at the top of
tech and have a lot of sway.”
During
the Trump administration, Altman gained new attention as a vocal critic of the
president. It was against that backdrop that he was rumored to be considering a
run for California governor.
Rather
than running, however, Altman instead looked to back candidates who aligned
with his values, which include lower cost of living, clean energy and taking
10% off the defense budget to give to research and development of future
technology.
Altman
continues to push for some of these goals through his work in the private
sector. He invested in Helion, a fusion research company that inked a deal with
Microsoft last week to sell clean energy to the tech giant by 2028.
Altman
has also been a proponent of the idea of a universal basic income and has
suggested that AI could one day help fulfill that goal by generating so much
wealth it could be redistributed back to the public.
As
Graham told The New Yorker about Altman in 2016, “I think his goal is to make
the whole future.”
An overnight AI sensation years in the making
When
launching OpenAI, Musk and Altman’s original mission was to get ahead of the
fear that AI could harm people and society.
“We
discussed what is the best thing we can do to ensure the future is good?” Musk
told the New York Times about a conversation with Altman and others before
launching the company. “We could sit on the sidelines or we can encourage
regulatory oversight, or we could participate with the right structure with
people who care deeply about developing A.I. in a way that is safe and is
beneficial to humanity.”
In
an interview at the launch of OpenAI, Altman explained the company as his way
of trying to steer the path of AI technology. “I sleep better knowing I can
have some influence now,” he said.
If
there’s one thing AI enthusiasts and critics can agree on right now, it may be
that Altman clearly has succeeded in having some influence over the rapidly
evolving technology.
Less
than six months after the release of ChatGPT, it has become a household name,
almost synonymous with AI itself. CEOs are using it to draft emails. Realtors
are using it to write iistings and draft legal documents. The tool has passed
exams from law and business schools – and been used to help some students
cheat. And OpenAI recently released a more powerful version of the technology
underpinning ChatGPT.
Tech
giants like Google and Facebook are now racing to catch up. Similar generative
AI technology is quickly finding its way into productivity and search tools
used by billions of people.
A
future that once seemed very far off now feels right around the corner, whether
society is ready for it or not. Altman himself has professed not to be sure
about how it will turn out.
O’Mara
said she believes Altman fits into “the techno-optimist school of thought that
has been dominant in the Valley for a very long time,” which she describes as
“the idea that we can devise technology that can indeed make the world a better
place.”
While
Altman’s cautious remarks about AI may sound at odds with that way of thinking,
O’Mara argues it may be an “extension” of it. In essence, she said, it’s related
to “the idea that technology is transformative and can be transformative in a
positive way but also has so much capacity to do so much that it actually could
be dangerous.”
And
if AI should somehow help bring about the end of society as we know it, Altman
may be more prepared than most to adapt.
“I
prep for survival,” he said in a 2016 profile of him in the New Yorker, noting
several possible disaster scenarios, including “A.I. that attacks us.”
“I
try not to think about it too much,” Altman said. “But I have guns, gold,
potassium iodide, antibiotics, batteries, water, gas masks from the Israeli
Defense Force, and a big patch of land in Big Sur I can fly to.”
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