Fortune | FORTUNE 10月10日 17:41
OpenAI高管谈AI发展史与未来机遇
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

OpenAI首席运营官Brad Lightcap在接受采访时,结合历史视角探讨了人工智能(AI)的发展。他指出,尽管过去的科技周期存在相似之处,但AI的独特之处在于其底层技术的持续演进,这使得AI的发展路径呈现出指数级且持续的增长。Lightcap认为,这种快速变化为初创企业带来了巨大的机遇,尤其是在企业AI领域,一切仍处于早期阶段,需要大量的基础设施建设。他将当前AI发展比作一个宏大变革的“四秒钟”。

💡 **AI发展的独特性与历史参照**:OpenAI首席运营官Brad Lightcap认为,尽管AI发展与过往科技周期有相似之处,但其底层技术的持续演进使其发展路径与众不同,呈现出指数级且不断进行的增长态势。他引用Carlota Perez的著作《Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital》来阐述科技革命的周期性,并强调AI的持续演进使其难以简单套用过去的模式。

🚀 **初创企业在AI时代的机遇**:Lightcap指出,AI领域的快速变化和“游戏版图”的不断重塑,为初创企业创造了前所未有的机遇。那些能够适应颠覆性变化、站在创新前沿并紧随技术浪潮的企业,将处于有利地位。他强调,企业AI的发展是一个漫长的过程,尚需大量基础建设。

⏳ **企业AI的早期阶段**:Lightcap将当前企业AI的发展置于非常早期的阶段,形容其仅是“四秒钟”的进展。他解释说,大型企业是复杂庞大的有机体,AI要对其产生实质性影响还需要时间。目前,模型开始具备使用工具、采取行动的能力,并能进行自我纠错,但这远非终点,仍有大量工作需要完成。

While OpenAI focused on the future during its DevDay event this week, I was especially curious about what OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap had to say about the past. 

Lightcap—who joined OpenAI from Y Combinator in 2018—double-majored in economics and history in college. I’m a big believer that we all, deep down, remain who we were and that, to understand moments of massive change, looking back is a helpful way to look forward. When I interviewed Lightcap for the Term Sheet Podcast and asked him what history could tell us about AI today, his answer surprised me.

“There are some things that rhyme [with previous technological cycles],” he said. “But in many ways, also, AI is weird…The reason I say that is because, if you look at past technological cycles, there’s almost always been one kind of innovation, right? Sometimes people call it the J-curve.” 

This is a paradigm, he said, that academic Carlota Perez talks about in her book, Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages. (He says it’s good, for anyone looking for reading material.)

“Her point, basically, is that these [transformations] have actually played out very consistently, and that you can understand these things as a repeatable phenomenon,” Lightcap said. “AI is different because the substrate is in a constant state of evolution. So, if you think about this as a road map from where we are to something akin to general intelligence, superintelligence, or whatever you want to call it—the path is exponential but it’s also ongoing.”

This rapid rate of change, he told Fortune, makes it a great time for startups.

“When the game board is getting shaken up like that, every day there’s opportunity,” said Lightcap, who also leads the OpenAI Startup Fund. “Anyone that can figure out how to really live in that disruption, live right at that frontier, and really just continue to move with the cresting wave as this continues—I think you’re in a great place.”

This ultimately aligns with Lightcap’s take on the enterprise AI race. Like any sector of tech, there’s pressure to innovate, of course. But when it comes to AI and the enterprise, Lightcap says, everything is still new and evolving in real time.  

“These transformations don’t happen overnight,” Lightcap said. “Enterprises are gigantic, complex organisms. When we think about how we progress our research roadmap, we actually think along the lines of AI that’s capable of impacting a large organization. We’re not there yet. We’re still in this era where you’re just starting to have models that can use tools, take actions. They know how to intelligently solve problems and can correct their own problem-solving, in some sense. But there’s still a lot that has to get built.”

Reflecting on how early it is in the enterprise AI story (but also in a statement that perhaps applies to AI overall), Lightcap put it simply: “We’re four seconds in this entire shift.”

See you Monday,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter. Subscribe here.

Venture Deals

- Reflection, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based open-source superintelligence lab, raised $2 billion in Series B funding from Nvidia, Disruptive, B Capital, Citi, and others.

- Expedition Therapeutics, a San Francisco-based developer of therapies for novel inflammatory and respiratory diseases, raised $165 million in Series A funding. Sofinnova Investments and Novo Holdings led the round and were joined by Forbion, Dawn Biopharma, and others.

- Yendo, a Dallas, Texas-based developer of a vehicle-secured credit card, raised $50 million in Series B funding from Spice Expeditions, Autotech Ventures, FPV Ventures, Pelion Venture Partners, and others.

- Sensi.AI, an Austin, Texas-based AI-powered copilot for senior care, raised $45 million in Series C funding. Qumra Capital led the round and was joined by Insight Partners, Zeev Ventures, Entrée Capital, Flint Capital, and Jibe Ventures.

- Routefusion, an Austin, Texas-based financial infrastructure provider, raised $26.5 million in Series A funding. PeakScan Capital led the round and was joined by Silverton Partners.

- Foundation Health, a San Francisco-based developer of AI technology for pharmacy operations, care coordination, and direct-to-patient delivery, raised $20 million in Series A funding. Define Ventures led the round and was joined by Vanderbilt University, Intermountain Ventures, and existing investors.

- CipherOwl, a San Francisco-based institutional cryptocurrency compliance platform, raised $15 million in seed funding. General Catalyst and Flourish Ventures led the round and were joined by Coinbase Ventures, Sancus Ventures, Enlight Capital, and others.

- HiOctave, a San Francisco-based provider of AI technology to help small and medium-sized businesses automate and personalize customer experiences, raised $15 million in funding. Vinod Khosla and Khosla Ventures led the round and were joined by Celesta Capital, Anthology Fund, and others.

- AnyTeam, a San Francisco-based AI-powered sales operating system, raised $10 million in seed funding. SignalFire and Crosslink Capital led the round and were joined by angel investors.

- Knapsack, a Portland, Ore.-based AI-powered digital product creation, raised $10 million in Series A funding. Builders VC led the round and was joined by Crosslink Capital, Epic Ventures, and others.

- Sitehop, a London, U.K.-based encryption platform designed for defense against quantum-powered cyber attacks, raised £7.5 million ($10 million) in funding. Northern Gritstone led the round and was joined by Amadeus Capital Partners, Manta Ray, and others.

- Akua, a Dover, Del. and Bogotá, Colombia-based operating system for payments in emerging markets, raised $8.5 million in seed funding. Flourish Ventures and Cathay Latam led the round and were joined by Atlantico and others.

- Smallest.ai, a San Francisco-based platform for building AI voice agents, raised $8 million in seed funding. Sierra Ventures led the round and was joined by 3one4 Capital and Better Capital.

- Onos Health, a San Francisco-based behavioral health platform, raised $6 million in seed funding. Haystack and Pathlight Ventures led the round and were joined by Bertelsmann Healthcare Investments and Nebular.

- bondu, a San Francisco-based AI-powered toy for kids, raised $5.3 million in seed funding. Makers Fund led the round and was joined by Samsung Ventures, Boost VC, and Founders Inc.

- PAVUS AI, a Santa Clara, Calif.-based platform designed to help procurement teams manage their data, raised $5.3 million in funding. Sentinel Global led the round.

- Previvor Edge, a New York City-based cancer prevention and early detection platform, raised $3.3 million in pre-seed funding. CoFound Partners and Max Ventures led the round and were joined by Humbition Capital, Red Swan Ventures, and Designer Fund.

- Oasiz, a San Francisco-based social platform for playable content, raised $2.5 million in seed funding. a16z Speedrun and The Venture Reality Fund led the round and were joined by others.

- Parallel, a Lehi, Utah-based AI-powered finance platform for startups, raised $2.3 million in seed funding. Night Capital and Tokyo Black led the round and were joined by Penny Jar Capital, Background VC, and others.

Private Equity

- Systems Planning & Analysis, a portfolio company of Arlington Capital Partners, acquired Group W, a Vienna and Dumfries, Va.-based data science and defense analytics company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Funds + Funds of Funds

- Ecosystem Investment Partners, a Baltimore, M.D. and San Francisco-based private equity firm, raised $400 million for its fifth fund focused on large-scale wetland, stream, water quality, biodiversity and habitat mitigation and restoration projects.

People

- Halifax Group, a Washington, D.C.-based private equity firm, promoted Jamie Cavanaugh to managing director.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

OpenAI Brad Lightcap AI发展 科技周期 初创企业 企业AI OpenAI COO AI History Tech Cycles Startups Enterprise AI
相关文章