OpenAI Resignations: How Do We Prevent AI From Going Rogue?
How do we prevent AI from going rogue?
OpenAI, the $80 billion AI company behind ChatGPT, just dissolved the team tackling that question — after the two executives in charge of the effort left the company.
The AI safety controversy comes less than a week after OpenAI announced a new AI model, GPT-4o, with more functionality — and a voice eerily similar to Scarlett Johansson’s. The company paused the rollout of that particular voice on Monday.
Sahil Agarwal, a Yale PhD in applied mathematics who co-founded and currently runs Enkrypt AI, a startup focused on making AI less of a risky bet for businesses, told Entrepreneur that innovation and safety are not separate things that need to be balanced, but rather two things that go hand in hand as a company grows.
“You’re not stopping innovation from happening when you’re trying to make these systems more safe and secure for society,” Agarwal said.
OpenAI Exec Raises Safety Concerns
Last week, the former OpenAI chief scientist and co-founder Ilya Sutskever and former OpenAI research lead Jan Leike both resigned from the AI giant. The two were tasked with leading the superalignment team, which ensures that AI is under human control, even as its capabilities grow.
Related: OpenAI Chief Scientist, Cofounder Ilya Sutskever Resigns
While Sutskever stated he was “confident” that OpenAI would build “safe and beneficial” AI under CEO Sam Altman’s leadership in his parting statement, Leike said he left because he felt OpenAI did not prioritize AI safety.
“Over the past few months my team has been sailing against the wind,” Leike wrote. “Building smarter-than-human machines is an inherently dangerous endeavor.”
Leike also said that “over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI and called for the ChatGPT-maker to put safety first.
But over the past years, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products.
— Jan Leike (@janleike) May 17, 2024
OpenAI dissolved the superalignment team that Leike and Sutskever led, the company confirmed to Wired on Friday.
Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI. Photographer: Dustin Chambers/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Altman and OpenAI president and co-founder Greg Brockman released a statement in response to Leike on Saturday, pointing out that OpenAI has raised awareness about the risks of AI so that the world can prepare for it and the AI company has been deploying systems safely.
We’re really grateful to Jan for everything he’s done for OpenAI, and we know he’ll continue to contribute to the mission from outside. In light of the questions his departure has raised, we wanted to explain a bit about how we think about our overall strategy.
First, we have… https://t.co/djlcqEiLLN
— Greg Brockman (@gdb) May 18, 2024
How Do We Prevent AI from Going Rogue?
Agarwal says that as OpenAI tries to make ChatGPT more human-like, the danger is not necessarily a super-intelligent being.
“Even systems like ChatGPT, they are not implicitly reasoning by any means,” Agarwal told Entrepreneur. “So I don’t view the risk as from a super-intelligent artificial being perspective.”
The problem is that as AI becomes more powerful and multifaceted, the possibility of more implicit bias and toxic content increases and the AI becomes riskier to implement, he explained. By adding more ways to interact with ChatGPT, from image to video, OpenAI has to think about safety from more angles.
Related: OpenAI’s Launches New AI Chatbot, GPT-4o
Agarwal’s company released a safety leaderboard earlier this month that ranks the safety and security of AI models from Google, Anthropic, Cohere, OpenAI, and more.
They found that the new GPT-4o model potentially contains more bias than the previous model and can possibly produce more toxic content than the previous model.
“What ChatGPT did is it made AI real for everyone,” Agarwal said.