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Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report
Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report

Economic Times

time5 hours ago

  • Business
  • Economic Times

Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's $14.2 billion investment in Scale AI last week, and roping in its CEO Alexandr Wang, appears to have been part of a larger game plan to build expertise in artificial intelligence (AI). Days after Sam Altman accused Zuckerberg of trying to poach OpenAI's talent, reports have emerged that Meta has been out shopping for other startups, including Ilya Sutskever's $32 billion Safe Superintelligence, launched just a year ago. Sources told news channel CNBC that Meta tried to acquire the startup founded by Sutskever, former chief scientist at OpenAI, earlier this year. However, Sutskever rebuffed the big tech giant's Zuckerberg started eyeing the chief executive of the startup, Daniel Gross. Zuckerberg is setting up a team of experts to achieve so-called "artificial general intelligence" (AGI), or machines that can match or surpass human capabilities. The Meta chief's apparent plans to personally recruit around 50 people, including a new head of AI research for the AGI team, is driven partly by frustration over the performance and reception of Meta's latest large language model, Llama 4. Altman swiped at Zuckerberg in his brother's podcast, 'Uncapped', saying that Meta tried to poach the company's AI talent for its superintelligence team. Additionally, he said Meta is not "great at innovation". The 'special thing' about OpenAI is that the company has built a culture that is good at 'repeatable' innovation, Altman noted.

CNBC Daily Open: Intensifying Israel-Iran conflict puts investors on shaky ground
CNBC Daily Open: Intensifying Israel-Iran conflict puts investors on shaky ground

CNBC

time11 hours ago

  • Business
  • CNBC

CNBC Daily Open: Intensifying Israel-Iran conflict puts investors on shaky ground

The conflict between Israel and Iran is intensifying, with both countries not backing down from strikes and their leaders continuing to issue heated rhetoric. The prospect of the United States potentially joining the fray — which Russia warned would cause "a terrible spiral of escalation" — is putting the world on a knife's edge. That unease is reflected in the markets. While U.S. exchanges were closed Thursday for a holiday, futures retreated in the evening local time. Across the Atlantic, travel and leisure stocks suffered the most as the Middle East conflict cast a shadow over international aviation. At the Paris Air Show, however, aircraft manufacturers are still booking billions in orders. Airbus had secured more than $20 billion in deals as of Thursday, according to Reuters calculations. That said, those encouraging numbers may not reflect immediate optimism about the global economy or geopolitics — aircrafts take years to deliver, and both Airbus and Boeing have a backlog of more than 8,000 and 5,000 aircrafts respectively. Until investors get a clearer sense of whether the U.S. will launch strikes on Iran, markets aren't likely to find solid ground.U.S. futures slip after trading reopensU.S. futures slipped Thursday evening stateside. Regular trading in the U.S. was closed for the Juneteenth holiday. While, oil prices for both U.S. crude oil rose, international benchmark Brent fell nearly 3%. Asia-Pacific markets rose Friday. China's CSI 300 added 0.26% at 1:30 p.m. Singapore time, as the country's central bank kept its benchmark lending rates unchanged. Meta tried to buy OpenAI co-founder's startupEarlier this year, Meta tried to acquire Safe Superintelligence, the artificial intelligence startup launched by OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, according to sources familiar with the matter. Sutskever turned down Meta and its attempt to hire him, the sources said. But Daniel Gross, the startup's CEO, and former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman will join Meta as part of Mark Zuckerberg's deal with NFDG, a venture capital firm both men run. Inflation in Japan highest in two yearsRice prices in Japan more than doubled in May, spiking 101.7% year over year and marking their largest increase in over half a century. The surge in rice prices comes as Japan's annual core inflation rate, which excludes fresh food costs, climbed to 3.7% in May, the highest since January 2023 and more than the 3.6% expected by economists polled by Reuters. Labubu-maker's shares slumpHong Kong-listed shares of Pop Mart, the toymaker behind the smash hit Labubu, continued to tumble Friday. Pop Mart first gained popularity with its "blind box" concept, a business model criticized by People's Daily, the Chinese Communist Party's official newspaper, on Friday. Morgan Stanley said in a note late Wednesday it was replacing Pop Mart with insurance company PICC P&C in the firm's China and Hong Kong focus list. Airbus stole the show in ParisAirbus dominated the order books at the Paris Air Show. The European aircraft manufacturer had racked up nearly $21 billion of orders as of Thursday morning, per a Reuters calculation. That included 132 firm orders on Monday, from customers including Saudi leasing firm AviLease, Japan's ANA and Poland's LOT, versus 41 for Boeing and 15 for Brazil's Embraer, according to a tally by aviation advisory IBA. [PRO] Berkshire stocks drop without BuffettWarren Buffett once predicted that Berkshire Hathaway stock would rise when he eventually steps down. So far, the opposite has happened. Since May 3, when the "Oracle of Omaha" announced his plans to hand over the reins, Berkshire stock has lost more than 10%, underperforming the S&P 500 by about 15 percentage points. Some think it could fall even more. Is India's hot IPO market cooling, or is it a blip? Twelve months ago, India's initial public offering market was booming, with tech startups from food and grocery delivery player Swiggy to electric two-wheeler manufacturer Ola Electric at the cusp of their debut. This year, however, there has been a pronounced change. There have been just 99 listings so far, down from 147 in the same period a year ago, according to FactSet data. Several companies have put their listing plans on hold given weak investor sentiment and the bleak macroeconomic outlook, despite having received approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report
Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report

Time of India

time12 hours ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Mark Zuckerberg made abortive attempt to buy ex-OpenAI executive Ilya Sutskever's AI startup: Report

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg 's $14.2 billion investment in Scale AI last week , and roping in its CEO Alexandr Wang, appears to have been part of a larger game plan to build expertise in artificial intelligence (AI). Days after Sam Altman accused Zuckerberg of trying to poach OpenAI 's talent, reports have emerged that Meta has been out shopping for other startups, including Ilya Sutskever 's $32 billion Safe Superintelligence , launched just a year ago. Sources told news channel CNBC that Meta tried to acquire the startup founded by Sutskever, former chief scientist at OpenAI, earlier this year. However, Sutskever rebuffed the big tech giant's efforts. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Play War Thunder now for free War Thunder Play Now Undo Subsequently, Zuckerberg started eyeing the chief executive of the startup, Daniel Gross. Zuckerberg is setting up a team of experts to achieve so-called "artificial general intelligence" (AGI), or machines that can match or surpass human capabilities. Live Events The Meta chief's apparent plans to personally recruit around 50 people, including a new head of AI research for the AGI team, is driven partly by frustration over the performance and reception of Meta's latest large language model, Llama 4. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories Altman swiped at Zuckerberg in his brother's podcast, 'Uncapped', saying that Meta tried to poach the company's AI talent for its superintelligence team. Additionally, he said Meta is not "great at innovation" . The 'special thing' about OpenAI is that the company has built a culture that is good at 'repeatable' innovation, Altman noted.

OpenAI co-founder says AI will do everything humans can and here is what students can do
OpenAI co-founder says AI will do everything humans can and here is what students can do

India Today

time10-06-2025

  • Business
  • India Today

OpenAI co-founder says AI will do everything humans can and here is what students can do

AI may be far from perfect today, but one of its original architects believes the technology is marching toward a future where it can do everything humans can – and possibly more. Ilya Sutskever, co-founder and former chief scientist at OpenAI, used his convocation address at the University of Toronto to reflect on the progress of artificial intelligence and the scale of transformation it could bring. "The real challenge with AI is that it is really unprecedented and really extreme, and it's going to be very different in the future compared to the way it is today," he told the graduating class on June acknowledging that today's AI models are better than humans at some things and worse at many others, Sutskever said it is only a matter of time before that balance shifts. "AI will keep getting better and the day will come when AI will do all the things that we can do," he confidence comes from a simple analogy: "We have a brain, the brain is a biological computer, so why can't a digital computer, a digital brain, do the same things? This is the one-sentence summary for why AI will be able to do all those things," he said. Sutskever called AI's current capabilities "evocative". He says, AI right now is strong enough to suggest vast possibilities, but still not close to reaching its full potential. He suggested that a true breakthrough into superintelligence is more a matter of when than if. "Three, five, maybe ten years" was his rough comes next, he admitted, raises dramatic questions: what will humans do when machines can do it all?advertisementSutskever pointed to potential outcomes like faster scientific discovery, economic growth, and extreme automation, leading to a phase where "the rate of progress will become really extremely fast for some time at least."Still, he stressed that this AI-driven future is inescapable. Sutskever says: "Whether you like it or not, your life is going to be affected by AI to a great extent."The speech was not all about machines. Like most convocation speakers, Sutskever also offered advice to the graduating class. He encouraged them to embrace reality as it is, rather than dwell on past mistakes. "It's so easy to think, 'Oh, some bad past decision or bad stroke of luck, something happened, something is unfair,'" he said. "It's so easy to spend so much time thinking like this while it's just so much better and more productive to say, 'Okay, things are the way they are, what's the next best step?'"That advice carried extra weight given his own history. In late 2023, Sutskever played a key role in the surprise ousting of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. He was part of the board that claimed it had lost confidence in Altman's leadership. But just days later, Sutskever publicly expressed regret for his involvement. "I deeply regret my participation in the board's actions," he posted on X, adding, "I never intended to harm OpenAI." He later joined hundreds of OpenAI staff in calling for Altman's reinstatement. Altman returned as CEO within the week. Sutskever left the company six months later to start a new research lab focused on building what he called "safe superintelligence."advertisementReturning to his alma mater to accept an honorary doctorate, Sutskever framed this moment in history as exceptional – not just for those in AI, but for everyone. "We all live in the most unusual time ever," he said. "And this is something that people might say often, but I think it's actually true this time. And the reason it's true this time is because of AI." He noted that AI is already changing what it means to be a student, and its effect on work and daily life is just beginning to unfold in "unknown and unpredictable ways." Instead of digging into technical detail, Sutskever leaned on intuition. "Anything which I can learn, anything which any one of you can learn, the AI could do as well," he said. His message to graduates was both a warning and a call to action: The future may be uncertain, but it's coming fast, and AI will be at the centre of it.

OpenAI cofounder tells new graduates the day is coming when AI 'will do all the things that we can'
OpenAI cofounder tells new graduates the day is coming when AI 'will do all the things that we can'

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

OpenAI cofounder tells new graduates the day is coming when AI 'will do all the things that we can'

OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says "the day will come when AI will do all the things that we can." He spoke about the state of AI at the University of Toronto convocation last week. Sutskever also advised graduates to "'accept reality as it is and try not to regret the past." Ilya Sutskever says it might take years, but he believes AI will one day be able to accomplish everything humans can. Sutskever, the cofounder and former chief scientist of ChatGPT maker OpenAI, spoke about the technology while giving a convocation speech at the University of Toronto, his alma mater, last week. "The real challenge with AI is that it is really unprecedented and really extreme, and it's going to be very different in the future compared to the way it is today," he said. Sutskever said that while AI is already better at some things than humans, "there are so many things it cannot do as well and it's so deficient, so you can say it still needs to catch up on a lot of things." But, he said, he believes "AI will keep getting better and the day will come when AI will do all the things that we can do." "How can I be so sure of that?" he continued. "We have a brain, the brain is a biological computer, so why can't a digital computer, a digital brain, do the same things? This is the one-sentence summary for why AI will be able to do all those things, because we have a brain and the brain is a biological computer." As is customary at convocation and commencement ceremonies, Sutskever also gave advice to the new graduates. He implored them to "accept reality as it is, try not to regret the past, and try to improve the situation." "It's so easy to think, 'Oh, some bad past decision or bad stroke of luck, something happened, something is unfair,'" he said. "It's so easy to spend so much time thinking like this while it's just so much better and more productive to say, 'Okay, things are the way they are, what's the next best step?'" Sutskever hasn't always taken his own advice on the matter, though. He's said before that he regrets his involvement in the November 2023 ousting of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Sutskever was a member of the board, which fired Altman after saying it "no longer has confidence" in his ability to lead OpenAI and that he was "not consistently candid in his communications." A few days later, however, Sutskever expressed regret for his involvement in the ouster and was one of hundreds of OpenAI employees who signed an open letter threatening to quit unless Altman was reinstated as CEO. "I deeply regret my participation in the board's actions," Sutskever said in a post on X at the time. "I never intended to harm OpenAI." Altman was brought back as CEO the same month. Sutskever left OpenAI six months later and started a research lab focused on building "safe superintelligence." Read the original article on Business Insider

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