Open AI CEO Sam Altman on raising kids in AI era: “My kid will grow up in a world where …”

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 “My kid will grow up in a world where …”

In a candid exchange with his brother Jack Altman on the Uncapped podcast, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman offered a rare personal glimpse into his life, mentioning his child and used the milestone moment to reflect on how future generations will adapt to the age of artificial intelligence.During a recent interview, when asked if the current trajectory of AI changes his perspective on what children should be learning or what he would teach his own kids, Altman paused before sharing a personal anecdote. "My kid did learn to roll over yesterday," he said with apparent pride, adding, "That's pretty good. Yeah, I was very impressed.Altman then returned to the broader question, suggesting that for his child's generation, the presence of highly intelligent AI will simply be the norm. "I don't think so," he replied regarding changing educational approaches for his child. "Like I, I mean, this stuff, it's not gonna ever seem weird to him, right? Like, he's just going to grow up in a world where, of course, computers are smarter than he is."

Sam Altman reveals why ChatGPT maker's 'best people' rejected Mark Zuckerberg's $100 million offers

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman delivered a brutal assessment of Meta's innovation capabilities, explaining why his top engineers turned down Mark Zuckerberg's eye-watering $100 million signing bonuses.

"There's many things I respect about Meta as a company, but I don't think they're a company that's great at innovation," said Altman. Speaking candidly about Meta's aggressive poaching attempts, Altman said the Facebook founder had "started making these giant offers to a lot of people on our team" but boasted that "none of our best people have decided to take them up on that."The OpenAI chief suggested his employees see the company as having "a much better shot actually, delivering on superintelligence and also may eventually be the more valuable company." Despite Meta's $1.77 trillion market cap dwarfing OpenAI's $300 billion valuation, the

ChatGPT

maker's engineers appear unconvinced by pure financial incentives.

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