OpenAI, the company behind the AI sensation ChatGPT, is again making headlines after securing $6.6 billion in one of the largest venture capital funding rounds in U.S. history.
According to The Wall Street Journal, this deal now values the San Francisco-based startup at a jaw-dropping $157 billion—on par with giants like Goldman Sachs, Uber and AT&T. Big-name backers including Thrive Capital, Microsoft and Nvidia, the world's leading AI chipmaker, have placed their bets on OpenAI’s potential to reshape the future.
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Interestingly, even Apple initially showed interest in the project. According to The Wall Street Journal, Apple discussed integrating ChatGPT with its new iPhone Intelligence system. However, those discussions eventually fizzled out and there was no official explanation.
This monumental funding surge heaps added pressure on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. According to WSJ, the clock is ticking. Originally founded as a nonprofit, OpenAI has only two years to fully transition into a for-profit entity, a change that has stirred debate among critics and supporters alike.
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Several experts have raised concerns that the drive to commercialize AI could lead to hasty releases of powerful tools before their risks are fully understood. Rushing to market could amplify societal risks—everything from privacy concerns to job displacement.
However, according to Bloomberg, Altman's vision remains clear: the new funds will be channeled to create a network of AI chip factories. OpenAI also aims to stay ahead of the competition to develop AI models that push the boundaries of humanlike reasoning.
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The company's latest large language model, code-named "o1," is engineered to simulate human reasoning at new levels, marking a significant leap forward. However, OpenAI isn't the only player in the game. As Bloomberg also noted, Google is investing heavily in AI to create models capable of handling intricate, multi-step problems, particularly in mathematics and coding.
However, not everyone is optimistic. Bloomberg cites renowned MIT economist Daron Acemoglu, who remains cautious about the AI hype, if not outright skeptical. Acemoglu argues that many claims about AI's potential to revolutionize industries are overly inflated.
He believes AI will likely automate no more than 5% of current jobs within the next decade – a far cry from the transformative promises echoing through Silicon Valley. "A lot of money will get wasted," Acemoglu warns, hinting at a tech bubble on the horizon.
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