Ex-OpenAI Founder Starts Rival AI Company Focused on… Safety?

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Episode 349: Neal and Toby discuss ex-OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever starting his own AI company that will prioritize safety vs. profits. Should OpenAI be concerned about a rivalry? Then, climate activists just painted Stonehenge with orange paint in the latest episode of defacing historical landmarks across Europe. Next, US car dealerships are scrambling as a widely used software for transactions has been hacked, not once, but twice. Meanwhile, GenZers and millennials who have money to spend are investing alternative assets vs. traditional assets. Also, Amazon is ditching its plastic air pillows in boxes and replacing them with loads of recyclable paper. Lastly, a harrowing escape from war-torn Ukraine featuring 2 beluga whales traveling by…car?

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00:00 - Olive Garden staying strong
2:30 - New AI sheriff in town?
7:20 - Climate activists paint Stonehenge
10:20 - Car dealerships hacked
14:10 - GenZ investors skip traditional assets
18:10 - Amazon replaces plastic pillows with paper
21:10 - Beluga whale rescue

#ai #openai #technews #tech #businessnews #climatechange #activism #taylorswift #cybersecurity #cars #genz #investing #crypto #amazon #whale

Morning Brew Daily, a daily talk show that covers the latest news on business, the economy, and everything else, with Neal Freyman and Toby Howell. Witty, informative and everything you need to start your day. Available on all podcasting platforms and Youtube.
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That beluga transport was a whale executed operation, definitely working toward a good porpoise.

SonoranSol
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For the stock investing aspect, I think that it being 'high net worth individuals' only distorts it to the point of being useless. Younger people with that level of wealth ($3 million plus) either inherited it or got lucky with some risk going well - it's only logical that they'd then be much aggressive about taking risks. Comparatively the older generations have had decades for regular investment to accrue and build up to that level of wealth and it opens it up to a much bigger slice of the pie. Also wouldn't be surprising at all if a good chunk of it were early crypto advocates who hit it big when it went mainstream - which would also boost that % of crypto holdings.

Is there some different investing going on? Probably, but this just doesn't compare the populations appropriately to be able to tell us much of any worth.

mattgopack
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I am 34 all of my money is invested in stocks. Low-cost index funds, and low-cost Target date index funds.

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