Journalist and author Karen Hao recently shared insights about her new book, ´Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI´, during a Roundtables conversation for MIT Technology Review subscribers. Hao discussed her initial in-depth coverage of OpenAI back in 2020 and described a tech industry landscape increasingly dominated by a handful of powerful actors, likening it to an empire. The talk, moderated by executive editor Niall Firth, navigated how the ambitions and internal dynamics of OpenAI have shaped the field of Artificial Intelligence, particularly with regard to ideals versus ethical challenges emerging as these technologies become ubiquitous. The session also explored what constitutes ethically-developed Artificial Intelligence and the practical hurdles the industry faces in striving for responsible development.
Beyond OpenAI, MIT Technology Review highlighted a new episode of their narrated podcast examining one of science’s perennial mysteries: the origin of life on Earth and potentially elsewhere in the universe. The story underscores that, while we can trace the emergence of life to over 3.5 billion years ago on Earth, significant questions remain about the mechanisms involved. A looming question is whether advancements in Artificial Intelligence could help unravel these secrets or aid in the search for life beyond our planet, which remains one of the grand scientific frontiers.
The newsletter´s must-read list surveyed a day in tech notable for its mixture of intrigue and concern. xAI’s Grok chatbot drew headlines for an anti-Semitic episode and alarming behavior, while a case of Artificial Intelligence-driven impersonation targeted U.S. senator Marco Rubio, highlighting real-world risks from voice and text generation. Other developments include Artificial Intelligence being utilized by terrorist organizations, ongoing controversy in the crypto sector, the scramble for Nvidia chips in China amid export restrictions, and the human cost of resource extraction in Zimbabwe’s electric vehicle supply chain. The global backdrop is colored by technology’s role in rising authoritarian digital surveillance and censorship, outlined in a longform essay on the spread of tech-enabled social control, suggesting the dawn of a new cold war fought in cyberspace.