TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Sam Altman’s company, OpenAI, is only seven years old. It has fewer than 500 employees. Pipe some pan flutes and whale sounds into the airy, light-filled lobby of its headquarters in San Francisco’s Mission District, and it could almost be mistaken for a spa.  But in the span of 6 months, the company—through its viral product ChatGPT—has vaulted AI into public consciousness. Few doubt it’s at the vanguard of a revolution that will, for better or worse and probably both, change the world.  Recently, Altman joined dozens of other tech leaders and scientists recently to sign a statement that cast the development of AI as a risk on par with pandemics and nuclear war. The worst-case scenario, he said earlier this year, is “lights out for everyone.”  This has become Altman’s calling card, championing the possibilities of AI while urging policymakers to get going on rules of the road to mitigate the dangers. It also informs his belief that we as a species can avoid the worst of what AI could bring.   “Society is capable of adapting as people are much smarter and savvier than a lot of the so-called experts think,” he says. “We can manage this.”  At the link in bio, find out why OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is pushing past doubts about artificial intelligence.  Photograph by Michelle Watt (@wattphoto) for TIME」6月21日 21時07分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 6月21日 21時07分


Sam Altman’s company, OpenAI, is only seven years old. It has fewer than 500 employees. Pipe some pan flutes and whale sounds into the airy, light-filled lobby of its headquarters in San Francisco’s Mission District, and it could almost be mistaken for a spa.

But in the span of 6 months, the company—through its viral product ChatGPT—has vaulted AI into public consciousness. Few doubt it’s at the vanguard of a revolution that will, for better or worse and probably both, change the world.

Recently, Altman joined dozens of other tech leaders and scientists recently to sign a statement that cast the development of AI as a risk on par with pandemics and nuclear war. The worst-case scenario, he said earlier this year, is “lights out for everyone.”

This has become Altman’s calling card, championing the possibilities of AI while urging policymakers to get going on rules of the road to mitigate the dangers. It also informs his belief that we as a species can avoid the worst of what AI could bring.

“Society is capable of adapting as people are much smarter and savvier than a lot of the so-called experts think,” he says. “We can manage this.”

At the link in bio, find out why OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is pushing past doubts about artificial intelligence.

Photograph by Michelle Watt (@wattphoto) for TIME


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

2,113

62

2023/6/21

のインスタグラム
さんがフォロー

TIME Magazineを見た方におすすめの有名人