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OpenAI CEO Envisions Neural Device For Telepathic Communication



By Rounak Jain

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman believes that there will be a neural device that will be able to display words as you think them and communicate telepathically, a sight that seems to be right out of a science-fiction movie.


Altman believes neural devices will be able to leverage advancements in artificial intelligence to actually visualize the thoughts of people in a word soup in their field of vision.

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, speaks to members of the press outside the “AI Insight Forum” at the Russell Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on September 13, 2023 in Washington, DC. Altman appeared on Joe Rogan’s podcast on the future of AI. (ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES) 

Microsoft invested $10 billion in OpenAI, which created ChatGPT. 

Speaking on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Altman explained that humans will be eventually able to communicate their thoughts with external devices. With enough progress, this could translate to telepathic communication with other human beings as well.

“I think we can do [things] like reading your thoughts with an external device at some point, [like] reading your internal monologue,” said Altman.

Altman says that using a combination of a neural interface with GPT-5 or 6 could help display the word “soup” to users.

“In your field of vision, the words in response were being displayed, that would be the pong. That’s still soup, [but] that’s a very valuable tool to have,” Altman said, adding that it is “inevitable.”

The Microsoft Corp.-backed (NASDAQ:MSFT) OpenAI is not the only company thinking about neural devices – Elon Musk’s Neuralink has been working on this technology for a few years now.

Musk was once part of the founding group of OpenAI. He expressed his concern about AI not being regulated and the dangers of the new technology.

The Tesla CEO would later create a new company called xAI in order to counter OpenAI.

While this sounds like an exciting frontier, there’s a dark side to it. Musk has been questioned by an ethics group recently for the painful death of monkeys involved in Neuralink research.

If this sounds a bit too Matrix-like, Altman thinks we are already a “little bit down that path”.

“We’re already a little bit down that path. Like if you take away someone’s phone and they have to go function in the world today, they’re at a disadvantage relative to everybody else,” said Altman.

While it might be a stretch to consider dependency on smartphones as living in the Matrix, Altman thinks VR will eventually “get so good that some people just don’t want to take it off that much,” just like smartphones.

“That’s like the lightest weight version of a merge we could imagine,” he added.

 

 

Produced in association with Benzinga



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