Close Menu
  • Home
  • Education
  • Health
  • National News
  • Politics
  • Relationship & Wellness
  • World News
What's Hot

America’s 250th Birthday: Best Lessons and Activities for the Semiquincentennial

April 27, 2026

Amruta Khanvilkar’s Mumbai abode ‘Ekam’ is a masterclass in Vastu and minimalist luxury: ‘Whatever food you eat gets blessed by Annapurna Devi…’

April 27, 2026

“I think my mom doesn’t love me”: What this 4-year-old reveals will break you | – The Times of India

April 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Global News Bulletin
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Education
  • Health
  • National News
  • Politics
  • Relationship & Wellness
  • World News
Global News Bulletin
Home»National News»Sam Altman at Express Adda Highlights: OpenAI CEO on AGI race, Musk rivalry, job losses, and Silicon Valley talent wars
National News

Sam Altman at Express Adda Highlights: OpenAI CEO on AGI race, Musk rivalry, job losses, and Silicon Valley talent wars

editorialBy editorialFebruary 21, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
Sam Altman at Express Adda Highlights: OpenAI CEO on AGI race, Musk rivalry, job losses, and Silicon Valley talent wars
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at Express Adda. (Express Image)OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (right) at Express Adda. (Express Image)

Sam Altman at Express Adda Today Live Updates: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was in conversation with Anant Goenka, Executive Director of The Indian Express Group, at Express Adda in New Delhi on Friday, February 20. During the hour-long conversation, Altman touched on the rapid pace of technological advancements, talent wars in Silicon Valley, intensifying competition, the race to AGI/ASI, AI’s impact on society, and his views on peers and contemporaries in the AI industry.

The session saw Altman engage with the audience with light humour as he discussed various aspects of AI development. During the conversation, he said, “AI has gone from being able to do high school math to pushing the edge of human knowledge.”

Story continues below this ad

Altman said the impact of AI on jobs is hard to predict. “I love to read the history of technology. People panicked about jobs during the Industrial Revolution, and they were shockingly wrong. The change won’t be as fast as some people in society predict. But eventually people will find new things to do,” he said.

Altman is arguably one of the most influential technology leaders today, having helped usher in a new digital revolution and offered the world a glimpse of what the future might look like. He co-founded OpenAI in 2015 to pursue artificial general intelligence (AGI), a state of technological maturity in which machines become capable of performing every task that a human being can, with greater precision, efficiency, and speed.