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the quick, deep thinker leading OpenAI

An influential Silicon Valley presence for more than a decade, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is emerging as the tech titan of the AI age, riding the wave of ChatGPT, the bot his company unleashed on the world.

Altman testified Tuesday to a US Senate Judiciary Committee panel and said artificial intelligence could be at a “printing press” moment, which would make him one of its main pioneers.

In 2015, Altman joined Tesla chief Elon Musk and others in starting OpenAI, a research company with a stated goal of building generative AI that benefits humanity.

“The technological progress we make in the next 100 years will be far larger than all we’ve made since we first controlled fire and invented the wheel,” Altman said in a 2021 blog post.

– Startup guru –

Born in 1985 into a Jewish family, Altman grew up in a St. Louis suburb, where he got his first computer at the age of eight, according to a long profile in the New Yorker from 2016.

Computers and the access to online community they enable helped him navigate being gay in a conservative part of the country, Altman said in an interview with Esquire.

Like so many tech figures before him, Altman dropped out of Stanford University to start a company, Loopt, which let smartphone users selectively share their whereabouts.

Loopt was acquired in 2012 in a deal valued at $43.4 million — and Altman’s place in Silicon Valley was secured.

Altman took a year off during which he “read many dozens of textbooks; I learned about the fields that I had been interested in,” the San Francisco resident wrote in a post.

He told of learning about nuclear engineering, synthetic biology, investing, and AI.

“The seeds were planted for things that worked in deep ways later,” he said.

– T-shirt and shorts –

In 2014, Altman became president of Y Combinator, an “accelerator” that provides startups with guidance and funding in exchange for stakes in the young companies.

Altman expanded Y Combinator’s strategy for investing beyond software startups to biotech, energy, and other fields.

“He thinks quickly and talks quickly; intense, but in a good way,” said Industrial Microbes founder Derek Greenfield, who met Altman while his biotech startup was getting backing from Y Combinator.

Greenfield recalled Altman always dressing casually, sometimes in a T-shirt and shorts.

“He was very down to earth,” Greenfield said.

Altman left Y Combinator, putting his energy into artificial intelligence despite feared risks.

“He’s a very deep thinker who is incredibly focused on getting things right,” Insider Intelligence senior director of marketing and commerce Jeremy Goldman said.

Altman backed a “United Slate” political project in 2018 aimed at improving housing and healthcare policy.

He also held a fundraising event for 2020 US presidential candidate Andrew Yang, who advocated for universal basic income.

Yang “had some ideas about universal basic income that (he said) everybody needed, in part because…

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