But the simple recap is this:power, ego and money pitted against concern and ethics.

“notedThe Wall Street Journal in its behind-the-scenes investigation.

Thetakeby The Atlantic magazine carries this headline: The Money Always Wins.

Altman, who was on the shortlist for Time magazine’s person of the year,toldWhat Now?

It felt like a dream.

It did not feel real.

Obviously, like upset and painful.

I was, like, I didn’t understand what was happening.

It happened in this, like, unprecedentedly, in my opinion, crazy way.

In the hour-long conversation, Noah also asked aboutworries that genAI will cause the apocalypse.

But can everything be fixed later?

Altman, 38, told Noah it isn’t exactly possible to make generative AI completely safe.

And so safety is like society deciding something is acceptably safe, given the risk-reward trade-offs.

And that, I think, we can get to.

But it doesn’t mean things aren’t going to go really wrong.”

Yes, I’ll sleep better tonight.

Here are the other doings in AI worth your attention.

Companies risk fines of up to 7% of their global revenue.

OpenAI isn’t among those signing on, nor is Google.

That means things like being able to figure out hand gestures in a video.

“And we respond with complex communication abilities, like speech and imagery, not just written words.

Gemini is an attempt to come closer to our own fuller understanding of the world.”

But there’s a little hitch.

The bottom line: We’re in an AI arms race and companies are moving to get ahead.

At least for now.

“Users point their phone’s camera, snap a picture and then will hear a description.”

The Currency function identifies money.

Or maybe you think you know what it’s all about?

It’s a useful primer, whether you’re chief of a company or not.

Its out-of-the-box accessibility makes generative AI different from all AI that came before it.

The first isfromventure firm Andreeesen Horowitz, which offers a simple one.

Market research firm Gartneroffers upa slightly more detailed answer.