OpenAI Co-founder Ilya Sutskever Starts His Own AI Company

Sutskever founded the company alongside Daniel Gross, who worked on AI at Apple, and Daniel Levy, who worked with him at OpenAI

Artificial Intelliegence Edited by Updated: Jun 20, 2024, 6:22 pm
OpenAI Co-founder Ilya Sutskever Starts His Own AI Company

Sutskever, 38, left OpenAI last month and disclosed at the time that he would be starting a new project but did not provide any details (Image: X @Ilya Suts)

OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, who in November joined other board members to depose Sam Altman, the company’s high-profile chief executive, has founded a new Artificial Intelligence company called Safe Superintelligence.

According to company spokesperson Lulu Cheng Meservey, the new company aims to produce superintelligence, a machine that is more intelligent than humans in a safe way. Sutskever, who has said he regretted moving against Altman, declined to comment anything about this venture.

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Sutskever, 38, left OpenAI last month and disclosed at the time that he would be starting a new project but did not provide details. Meservey declined to name who is funding the company or how much it has raised. She said that as it builds safe superintelligence, the company will not release other products. The news was reported earlier by Bloomberg.

Sutskever founded the company alongside Daniel Gross, who worked on AI at Apple, and Daniel Levy, who worked with him at OpenAI. Sutskever’s title at the new company will be chief scientist, but he describes his role, according to Meservey, as “responsible for revolutionary breakthroughs.”

OpenAI captured the world’s imagination with the release of ChatGPT, an online chatbot that could answer questions, write term papers, generate computer code and even mimic human conversation in November 2022. The tech industry rapidly comprehends what it called generative artificial intelligence: technologies that can generate text, images and other media.

Experts believe these technologies are intended to remake everything from email programs to internet search engines and digital assistants. Some believe this transformation will have a big an impact as the web browser or the smartphone.

The New York Times has sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, claiming copyright infringement of news content related to AI systems. Altman became the face of the movement toward generative AI as he met with lawmakers, regulators and investors around the world and testified before Congress.

In November, Sutskever and three other OpenAI board members unexpectedly expelled him, saying they could no longer trust him with the company’s plan to one day create a machine that can do anything the human brain can do.

After hundreds of OpenAI employees threatened to quit, Sutskever said he regretted his decision to remove Altman. Altman returned as CEO after he and the board agreed to replace two board members with Bret Taylor, a former Salesforce executive, and Lawrence Summers, a former U.S. Treasury secretary. Sutskever effectively stepped down from the board.

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Sutskever helped create what was called a Superalignment team inside OpenAI that aimed to ensure that future AI technologies would not harm last year. He had grown increasingly concerned that AI could become dangerous and perhaps even destroy humanity just like others in the field. Jan Leike, who ran the Super alignment team alongside Sutskever, has also resigned from OpenAI. He has since been hired by OpenAI’s competitor Anthropic; a company founded by former OpenAI researchers.

(With inputs from The Newyork Times)