Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT, and the Race That Will Change the World
Parmy Olson. St. Martin’s, $30 (336p) ISBN 978-1-250-33774-0
This animated report from Olson (We Are Anonymous), a technology columnist for Bloomberg Opinion, recounts the competition between OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and DeepMind founder Demis Hassabis to bring artificial intelligence software to market. She explains how Altman’s belief that it was in humanity’s best interest for OpenAI to create the technology as soon as possible led him to abandon the organization’s nonprofit status so it could partner with and receive funding from Microsoft. Hassabis followed a similar trajectory, establishing DeepMind in 2010 out of a desire to develop AI capable of answering “where humans had come from and what their purpose was” before he sold the company to Google to secure long-term funding. Though Olson frames the narrative as a clash of titans, there’s surprisingly little direct conflict between Altman and Hassabis, aside from a tense 2020 dinner during which Hassabis accused Altman of enabling bad actors by releasing GPT-3 (the precursor to ChatGPT) to the public. Nonetheless, Olson’s punchy prose and eye for detail brings her subjects to vivid life (she writes that Altman is “bright as any geek, charismatic as any jock”). Though somewhat lacking in drama, this attests to how quickly humanitarian ideals devolve into brazen profit-seeking in Silicon Valley. Agent: David Fugate, Launch Books. (Sept.)
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Reviewed on: 06/17/2024
Genre: Nonfiction