chief scientist
For Silicon Valley, AI isn't just about replacing some jobs. It's about replacing all of them Ed Newton-Rex
I recently found myself at a dinner in an upstairs room at a restaurant in San Francisco hosted by a venture capital firm. The after-dinner speaker was a tech veteran who, having sold his AI company for hundreds of millions of dollars, has now turned his hand to investing. He had a simple message for the assembled startup founders: the money you can make in AI isn't limited to the paltry market sizes of previous technology waves. You can replace the world's workers – which means you can capture their salaries. Replacing all human labour with AI sounds like the stuff of science fiction.
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Anthropic's chief scientist on 5 ways agents will be even better in 2025
In October, Anthropic showed off one of the most advanced agents yet: an extension of its Claude large language model called computer use. As the name suggests, it lets you direct Claude to use a computer much as a person would, by moving a cursor, clicking buttons, and typing text. Instead of simply having a conversation with Claude, you can now ask it to carry out on-screen tasks for you. Anthropic notes that the feature is still cumbersome and error-prone. But it is already available to a handful of testers, including third-party developers at companies such as DoorDash, Canva, and Asana. Computer use is a glimpse of what's to come for agents.
Former OpenAI Chief Scientist Announces New Safety-Focused Company
Ilya Sutskever, a co-founder and former chief scientist of OpenAI, announced on Wednesday that he's launching a new venture dubbed Safe Superintelligence Inc. Sutskever said on X that the new lab will focus solely on building a safe "superintelligence"--an industry term for a hypothetical system that's smarter than humans. Sutskever is joined at Safe SuperIntelligence Inc. by co-founders Daniel Gross, an investor and engineer who worked on AI at Apple till 2017, and Daniel Levy, another former OpenAI employee. The new American-based firm will have offices in Palo Alto, Calif., and Tel Aviv, according to a description Sutskever shared. I am starting a new company: https://t.co/BG3K3SI3A1 Sutskever was one of OpenAI's founding members, and was chief scientist during the company's meteoric rise following the release of ChatGPT.
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OpenAI co-founder who had key role in attempted firing of Sam Altman departs
OpenAI's co-founder and chief scientist, Ilya Sutskever, is leaving the startup at the center of today's artificial intelligence boom. "After almost a decade, I have made the decision to leave OpenAI," Sutskever said in a post on X. Sutskever played a key role in the dramatic firing and rehiring in November last year of OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman. At the time, Sutskever was on the board of OpenAI and helped to orchestrate Altman's firing. Days later, he reversed course, signing on to an employee letter demanding Altman's return and expressing regret for his "participation in the board's actions". After Altman returned, Sutskever was removed from the board, and his position at the company became unclear.
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Why Won't OpenAI Say What the Q* Algorithm Is?
Last week, it seemed that OpenAI--the secretive firm behind ChatGPT--had been broken open. The company's board had suddenly fired CEO Sam Altman, hundreds of employees revolted in protest, Altman was reinstated, and the media dissected the story from every possible angle. Yet the reporting belied the fact that our view into the most crucial part of the company is still so fundamentally limited: We don't really know how OpenAI develops its technology, nor do we understand exactly how Altman has directed work on future, more powerful generations. This was made acutely apparent last Wednesday, when Reuters and The Information reported that, prior to Altman's firing, several staff researchers had raised concerns about a supposedly dangerous breakthrough. At issue was an algorithm called Q* (pronounced "Q-star"), which has allegedly been shown to solve certain grade-school-level math problems that it hasn't seen before.
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Sam Altman Returns as OpenAI CEO. Here's How It Happened
Over five chaotic days that transfixed Silicon Valley and beyond, the world's leading artificial intelligence company, OpenAI, appeared to be on the verge of imploding in a power struggle. The maker of ChatGPT, the sensational chatbot, had a mission to safely develop smarter-than-human AI. But that mission looked in jeopardy on Friday when OpenAI's non-profit board of directors fired Altman, suggesting he had been dishonest in his communications with them. To many spectators, the future of not just AI but also humanity hung in the balance. Finally late on Tuesday night, after three CEO changes and a full-court press by Microsoft, the board gave Altman his old job back.
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OpenAI's Chief Scientist Made a Tragic Miscalculation
Ilya Sutskever, bless his heart. Until recently, to the extent that Sutskever was known at all, it was as a brilliant artificial-intelligence researcher. He was the star student who helped Geoffrey Hinton, one of the "godfathers of AI," kick off the so-called deep-learning revolution. In 2015, after a short stint at Google, Sutskever co-founded OpenAI and eventually became its chief scientist; so important was he to the company's success that Elon Musk has taken credit for recruiting him. Still, apart from niche podcast appearances and the obligatory hour-plus back-and-forth with Lex Fridman, Sutskever didn't have much of a public profile before this past weekend.
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Exclusive: Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI's chief scientist, on his hopes and fears for the future of AI
Instead of building the next GPT or image maker DALL-E, Sutskever tells me his new priority is to figure out how to stop an artificial superintelligence (a hypothetical future technology he sees coming with the foresight of a true believer) from going rogue. Sutskever tells me a lot of other things too. He thinks ChatGPT just might be conscious (if you squint). He thinks the world needs to wake up to the true power of the technology his company and others are racing to create. And he thinks some humans will one day choose to merge with machines.
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'Godfather of AI' Geoffrey Hinton quits Google and warns over dangers of machine learning
The man often touted as the godfather of AI has quit Google, citing concerns over the flood of fake information, videos and photos online and the possibility for AI to upend the job market. Dr Geoffrey Hinton, who with two of his students at the University of Toronto built a neural net in 2012, quit Google this week, the New York Times reported. Hinton, 75, said he quit to speak freely about the dangers of AI, and in part regrets his contribution to the field. He was brought on by Google a decade ago to help develop the company's AI technology. Hinton's research led the way for current systems like ChatGPT.
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Mozilla Launches a New Startup Focused on 'Trustworthy' AI - Slashdot
On the eve of its 25th anniversary, Mozilla, the not-for-profit behind the Firefox browser, is launching an AI-focused startup. From a report: Called Mozilla.ai, the newly forged company's mission isn't to build just any AI -- its mission is to build AI that's open source and "trustworthy," according to Mark Surman, the executive president of Mozilla and the head of Mozilla.ai. "Working on trustworthy AI for almost five years, I've constantly felt a mix of excitement and anxiety," he told TechCrunch in an email interview. "The last month or two of rapid-fire big tech AI announcements has been no different. Really exciting new tech is emerging -- new tools that have immediately sparked artists, founders ... all kinds of people to do new things. The anxiety comes when you realize almost no one is looking at the guardrails."