12 quotes found
"GPT-4 isn’t perfect, but neither are you."
"We spent a lot of time trying to understand what GPT-4 is capable of,” Brockman said. “Getting it out in the world is how we learn. We’re constantly making updates, include a bunch of improvements, so that the model is much more scalable to whatever personality or sort of mode you want it to be in. There’s policy issues like facial recognition and how to treat images of people that we need to address and work through. We need to figure out, like, where the sort of danger zones are — where the red lines are — and then clarify that over time."
"If anyone is interested in finding what they’re passionate about and not following the beaten path, it should look unique to you, it should be something that is authentic to you,"
"I think this technology is so desirable, it will be built with or without us,” he said. “But what we can do, what we can all do, is help steer it, is help decide how we want this to integrate with society, how we want to work with it, how we want this to integrate with our lives."
"We're working on something that will change everything. Will change the way that we work, the way that we interact with each other, and the way that we think and everything, really, all aspects of life."
"As with other revolutions that we've gone through, there will be new jobs and some jobs will be lost"
"Journalist: There's always a fear that government involvement can slow innovation. You don't think it's too early for policymakers and regulators to get involved?"
"Artificial intelligence (AI) can be misused, or it can be used by bad actors. So then, there are questions about how you govern the use of this technology globally. How do you govern the use of AI in a way that is aligned with human values?"
"Journalist: Let's take a step back: There's so much interest not just in the product but the people making this all happen. What do you think are the most formative experiences you've had that have shaped you and who you are today?"
"Journalist: Will GPT-5 solve the hallucination problem?"
"It started with math. When I was a kid, I just gravitated toward math. I would do problem sets all the time and then eventually did Olympiads and I loved doing that. It was such a passion."
"Journalist: Is there a path between products like GPT-4 and AGI?"