The World Economic Forum at Davos has become the latest stage for discussions on artificial intelligence, where the topic has been labeled a key issue in this year's gathering.
Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, is become one of the most prominent names in attendance at Davos, along with other high-profile tech CEOs.
In a Wednesday interview, Altman said GPT5, the upcoming version of his firm's large language model, will invariably be able to do a lot more than previous iterations, including the groundbreaking GPT4, which is the engine behind ChatGPT.
"The thing that matters most is not that it can have this new modality or it can solve this new problem, it is that the generalized intelligence keeps increasing," said Altman in an interview with Axios.
"That is the high-ordered bit," he said. "That is, the overall capabilities of the model, its overall intelligence. Its ability to do longer, more complex problems, more accurately, more of them."
Altman says he now understands that the "productization" of AI is now a critical step in the process of his company, which came to be as a research company but ...