We already knew where OpenAIâs CEO, Sam Altman, stands on artificial intelligence vis-Ã -vis the human saga: It will be transformative, historic, and overwhelmingly beneficial. He has been nothing but consistent across countless interviews. For some reason, this week he felt it necessary to distill those opinions in a succinct blog post. âThe Intelligence Age,â as he calls it, will be a time of abundance. âWe can have shared prosperity to a degree that seems unimaginable today; in the future, everyoneâs lives can be better than anyoneâs life is now,â he writes. âAlthough it will happen incrementally, astounding triumphsâfixing the climate, establishing a space colony, and the discovery of all of physicsâwill eventually become commonplace.â
Maybe he published this to dispute a train of thought that dismisses the apparent gains of large language models as something of an illusion. Nuh-uh, he says. Weâre getting this big AI bonus because âdeep learning works,â as he said in an interview later in the week, mocking those who said that programs like OpenAIâs GPT4o were simply stupid engines delivering the next token in a queue. “Once it can start to prove unproven mathematical theorems, do we really still want to debate: ‘Oh, but it’s just predicting the next token?'” he said.
No matter what you think of Sam Altman, itâs indisputable that this is his truth: Artificial general intelligenceâAI that matches and then exceeds human capabilitiesâis going to obliterate the problems plaguing humanity and usher in a golden age. I suggest we dub this deus ex machina concept The Strawberry Shortcut, in honor of the codename for OpenAIâs recent breakthrough in artificial reasoning. Like the shortcake, the premise looks appetizing but is less substantial in the eating.
Altman correctly notes that the march of technology has brought what were once luxuries to everyday peopleâincluding some unavailable to pharaohs and lords. Charlemagne never enjoyed air-conditioning! Working-class people and even some on public assistance have dishwashers, TVs with giant screens, iPhones, and delivery services that bring pumpkin lattes and pet food to their doors. But Altman is not acknowledging the whole story. Despite massive wealth, not everyone is thriving, and many are homeless or severely impoverished. To paraphrase William Gibson, paradise is here, itâs just not evenly distributed. Thatâs not because technology has failedâwe have. I suspect the same will be true if AGI arrives, especially since so many jobs will be automated.
Altman isnât terribly specific about what life will be like when many of our current jobs go the way of 18th-century lamplighters. We did get a hint of his vision in a podcast this week that asked tech luminaries and celebrities to share their Spotify playlists. When explaining why he chose the tune âUnderwaterâ by Rüfüs du Sol, Altman said it was a tribute to Burning Man, which he has attended several times. The festival, he says, âis part of what the post-AGI can look like, where people are just focused on doing stuff for each other, caring for each other and making incredible gifts to get each other.â
Altman is a big fan of universal basic income, which he seems to think will cushion the blow of lost wages. Artificial intelligence might indeed generate the wealth to make such a plan feasible, but thereâs little evidence that the people who amass fortunesâor even those who still eke out a modest livingâwill be inclined to embrace the concept. Altman might have had a great experience at Burning Man, but some kind souls of the Playa seem to be up in arms about a proposal, affecting only people worth over $100 million, to tax some of their unrealized capital gains. Itâs a dubious premise that such peopleâor others who become super rich working at AI companiesâwill crack open their coffers to fund leisure time for the masses. One of the USâs major political parties canât stand Medicaid, so one can only imagine how populist demagogues will regard UBI.
Iâm also wary of the supposed bonanza that will come when all of our big problems are solved. Letâs concede that AI might actually crack humanityâs biggest conundrums. We humans would have to actually implement those solutions, and thatâs where weâve failed time and again. We donât need a large language model to tell us war is hell and we shouldnât kill each other. Yet wars keep happening.