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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and chief scientist Jakub Pachocki published a blog post on Monday declaring the company is entering its “third phase,” shifting its ambitions from research breakthroughs and product launches toward making advanced AI universally accessible and safe.
The post frames OpenAI’s history in three acts. The first phase centered on research toward artificial general intelligence; the second on shipping products and learning how people use them. “Now we are entering the third phase,” Altman and Pachocki wrote. “The central question now is how to make advanced AI abundant, affordable, safe, useful, and easy enough for every person and organization to benefit from it. Frontier capability is only part of the job. The bigger task is turning that capability into tools people can actually use to thrive.”businessinsider
The pair outlined three primary goals: building an automated AI researcher, accelerating the economy through scientific progress, and giving every person on Earth a “personal AGI.” OpenAI has previously stated it believes a significant fraction of its own research may be conducted by AI systems working alongside humans by March 2028.digg
Despite the sweeping ambitions, the post struck a cautionary note. “Powerful systems must remain safe, aligned with human intent, and subject to human control,” Altman and Pachocki wrote. “Entirely automating everything is not the future we want. It would be unfulfilling, and it would be dangerous. AI should help people pursue their goals, not become untethered from them.”businessinsider
They called for national and global coordination on AI risk and reiterated their support for an international organization that could slow frontier model development if needed. “A good AI future cannot be one where a small number of institutions control most of the capability and most of the upside,” they wrote.businessinsider
The blog post arrived the same day OpenAI announced it had confidentially filed for an initial public offering, though the company said it “may be a while” before shares hit the market. The timing echoed a post last week from rival Anthropic, whose researchers argued that leading AI labs may need to slow or temporarily pause frontier development to let societal structures and alignment research catch up. Microsoft, OpenAI’s largest backer, continues to support the company’s expanding vision.seekingalpha