Sam Altman has his head on a swivel, constantly clocking huge AI breakthroughs that foretell a future where our biggest and sometimes most personal problems might be solved and our wildest dreams realized by AI.
This week, in a lengthy and revealing chat with former CNN journalist and current Mostly Human podcast host Laurie Segall, the OpenAI CEO opened up about Sora’s demise (needed the compute because something “very big and important is about to happen”), signing up with the US Department of War after Anthropic balked (“very important that the governments are more powerful [than AI]”), and some remarable AI breakthroughs.
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Big AI business
Altman, who complained that OpenAI’s Codex AI coding agent model is not yet smart enough to help him cook up new side-project ideas, shared the startling story of someone who used the platform to build a billion-dollar company — by themself.
Segall was asking about the possibility that a sole entrepreneur might someday use these tools to build the next billion-dollar company.
“I believe that has happened,” said Altman, who wasn’t at liberty to offer any details like the name of the entrepreneur, the business, or what it does.
“It is a legitimate single-person billion-dollar company as far as I can tell. I have not like reviewed the financials, but I think it’s just happened,” added Altman.
The way this person built it might be more interesting. It was all done with Codex.
Altman called the founder “One of the top users of Codex of all time,” and “just like unbelievably productive in a way that no single person could have been.”
Altman was so impressed that he hired the entrepreneur.
AI is your new partner
What these two stories have in common is a pair of obsessive people who are pushing the AI’s to their limits.
As someone on LinkedIn noted on Conyngham’s page, “Paul didn’t have a biology degree. He had 17 years of pattern recognition, a dying dog he loved, and the willingness to treat an impossible problem as a data problem.”
In the case of the entrepreneur, it doesn’t sound like they dropped a brief prompt into Codex and then walked away while it built and ran a company. Most of the best work coming out of AI is collaborative, with the collaboration between you and the AI.
Prompts are merely a starting point. The conversation and refinement of those requests is what gets the work done and drives you and the AI to a final product.
In the case of Rosie the dog, the mRNA vaccine was not developed and administered by the AI. ChatGPT and the other platforms were like very smart research assistants, digging through the reams of data on dog cancer research to find meaningful information and make recommendations. Conyngham figured out what to do with it and then turned to the human experts to make it happen.
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lance.ulanoff@futurenet.com (Lance Ulanoff)




