cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/47387000

Sam Altman says OpenAI wants to sell intelligence like a utility

During a recent appearance at BlackRock in Washington, D.C., OpenAI’s Sam Altman, shared his vision for the future of AI. At one point saying, “We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter.”

Altman was describing a world where AI becomes a foundational infrastructure, something woven into everyday life so deeply that consumers and businesses simply “plug into” it the same way they rely on electricity, Wi-Fi or running water.

    • Andrew Beveridge@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      Nah, I’m just moving with the times in an industry which didn’t give me much choice - was laid off twice and the contract roles I ended up managing to get were companies who were already heavily using and expecting usage of AI. Tbh though I see it like the early days of the internet - and while I’m not a fan of big tech, wish the US was less corrupt and wish capitalism wasn’t so rampant, at this point IMO the cat is very much out of the bag and the industry has moved on - at least where I am right now. I’d imagine if I move back to Britain the usage/attitudes towards AI are probably pretty different

      • ZDL@lazysoci.al
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        2 days ago

        I see it like the early days of the internet

        Yes. The early days of the Internet when workers famously had to be threatened to use the Internet for their work or they’d be fired. The early days of the Internet where the public had to cajoled into using the Internet by cramming it into everything just so the early Internet companies could inflate user count statistics.

        Yes, the parallels are very strong!

        • Andrew Beveridge@sh.itjust.works
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          2 days ago

          I guess we have different memories of that era, I remember a lot of people moaning about everything going online, businesses feeling the pressure to set up websites, people being shut out of services if they didn’t get with the times and get an internet connection, etc.

          Same shit, different tech. It’s just the brutal march of tech under late stage capitalism, my opinion is that you can’t change it, you can only decide whether you’ll ride the wave and move with the times or bury your head in the sand and hope it blows over. Tbh I did the latter for the first few years but once I realised the job I’d done for decades was basically no longer a job, I realised I had to just suck it up and move with the times 🤷

          • ZDL@lazysoci.al
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            2 days ago

            I have memories of people sneaking some form of Internet connection into the workplace against the rules of corporate IT. I have memories of young people arguing with their (older) bosses that the Internet was the future and bosses pushing back and banning it. I have memories of people being eager to get hooked up to the Internet at home; people actively looking to find an ISP that would allow another sign-up (because most of them were saturated at the time).

            I also have memories of how every new user on the Internet increased the profitability of the Internet sphere as a whole instead of, you know—like with modern AI—each new user being a further drain.

            So yes, we have different memories. Mine just happen to line up with facts.

        • Andrew Beveridge@sh.itjust.works
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          2 days ago

          Not sure what you mean, I don’t work for big tech and never have. I’m not churning out slop, I’m building products which work, still maintaining the quality standards I always have - in fact I feel like I’m about to raise the bar much more easily now, I can build a thorough test suite which covers the whole test pyramid way faster than ever before which means most of my code is more thoroughly tested now