Chat Pioneer Sam Altman warned against Blind Trust at AI: ‘It hails hallucinations’
July 01, 2025 04:24 pm IST
Openai CEO Sam Altman says that uncontrolled dependence on AI tools such as chatters may have large risks; He was speaking on the company’s official podcast.
The most prominent innovators behind the bounce of Artificial Intelligence have warned of AI’s CEO Sam Altman of AI. Referring to Openai’s Marquee Product Chatgpt, he warned users not to rely on AI with “almost everything”.
Altman said that he finds it interesting when people believe in high levels in chat.
Speaking in the first episode of Openai’s official podcast, he said, “People have a lot of confidence in chat, which is interesting, because AI makes hallucinations. It should be the technique that you don’t trust on it.”
Drawing from his life, he explained how he to do for diaper rashes for infants after becoming a new parents.
Altman also addressed Openai’s privacy concerns as he talked about recent updates, such as a possible advertising model. He said that such progress has expressed the latest concern.
AI Maubhram that Sam Altman is afraid
When an AI model starts generating incorrectly or, just misleading data with revaluation, one may say that AI tool is hallucinations. Some of these outputs have no relevance of the real thing in the question. As Altman repeated, the blind dependence on AI can pose a big risk for individuals in such a way that it trusts it with anything and everything.
“We need to be honest about it …” it’s not super reliable, “he said
Altman’s statement also comes in light of cases filed by media organizations on violation of their intellectual property against OpenAII. According to a report by Reuters, The New York Times sued Openai and Microsoft in 2023, accusing them of using millions of articles without permission to train the big language model behind their popular chatbot chat.
ALTMAN changes the stance on hardware
While earlier Altman insisted that AI’s advent and comprehensive use would not require new hardware, they opposed the podcast. He underlined that the current computers were designed for a world without AI.
He suggested that users would need new devices as AI becomes more prevalent.
With input from Reuters