This OpenAI podcast episode features an interview with Sam Altman, CEO and co-founder of OpenAI. The conversation covers a range of topics including Altman's personal use of ChatGPT as a new parent, his definition of AGI and superintelligence, the upcoming GPT-5 model, user privacy concerns, the potential for advertising in ChatGPT, Project Stargate (OpenAI's massive compute infrastructure project), and the future of AI devices.
Sam Altman found ChatGPT extremely helpful in the first few weeks after his child's birth, using it constantly to answer questions. Later, he used it to ask questions about developmental stages.
Sam Altman defines superintelligence as a system capable of either autonomously discovering new science or significantly increasing the ability of humans using the tool to discover new science. He views this as a tremendously exciting milestone and a wonderful thing for the world because he believes increased scientific progress is key to improving people's lives.
OpenAI will argue that the New York Times' request for access to user data beyond the standard 30-day retention period is an unreasonable overreach and a compromise of user privacy. They believe this request is unwarranted, especially considering the New York Times' stated commitment to user privacy.
Sam Altman is not entirely against advertising in ChatGPT but emphasizes the need to proceed cautiously to avoid damaging user trust. He suggests that modifying the LLM's output in exchange for advertising revenue would be detrimental, while advertising outside of the LLM's stream might be a more acceptable approach, provided it's clearly presented and doesn't interfere with the LLM's responses.