OpenAI's Sam Altman sees AI bubble forming
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At a dinner with reporters in San Francisco, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman spilled details on the company's ambitions beyond ChatGPT.
Elon Musk and Sam Altman speak onstage at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit on October 6, 2015 in San Francisco, California, back when they were still friends. Two of the most prominent names in AI,
OpenAI might unveil the gadget in late 2026, with CEO Altman aiming to ship 100 million units faster than any product before.
Elon Musk praised OpenAI's GPT-5 model as impressive despite previously stating his Grok 4 Heavy model remains competitive. OpenAI had touted the reduced hallucinations in GPT-5 as one of the top features during the model launch.
Sam Altman said that he wants to keep AI from accidentally exploiting mental fragility in users. Here's how that can be undertaken. It's an AI Insider scoop.
The rollout was even messy enough to spill into betting markets. One 27-year-old day trader, Foster McCoy, pocketed $10,000 in just a few hours by wagering that Google’s Gemini would beat GPT-5 in a popularity contest.
He admitted that China's progress, particularly with open-source models like DeepSeek and Kimi K2, influenced OpenAI's decision to release its models.