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OpenAI's Sarah Friar: ‘Am I worried about deep fakes? Yes'
OpenAI's Sarah Friar: ‘Am I worried about deep fakes? Yes'

Irish Times

time18 hours ago

  • Business
  • Irish Times

OpenAI's Sarah Friar: ‘Am I worried about deep fakes? Yes'

When Sarah Friar announced she was stepping back as chief executive of neighbourhood tech platform Nextdoor, she had a plan. 'I felt I had done all I could – inject big growth into the system. I'd taken Nextdoor public, I made sure the balance sheet was really robust, I'd done a lot of work on the product and kind of rebuilt the whole site from scratch,' she says. 'I wasn't feeling though that my growth trajectory was still like this. I felt like I was plateauing a little. And frankly, I was at a stage of life where, ironically, I thought maybe I wanted to retire and take a break.' It didn't quite work out that way. Within a few weeks, OpenAI came calling via Larry Summers, tapping her to be the company's next chief financial officer. Friar was intrigued. 'All the delusions I had of this beautiful life I was going to lead? Bye. I'll go back to working really hard,' she says. 'But how could I say no? It was just an incredible moment for technology, and that's certainly lived up to that promise. I feel like I've gotten a front-row seat to incredible outcomes.' READ MORE That was in June 2024. Almost a year later, Friar is at the Dublin Tech Summit, discussing everything from AI safety to the future of the sector. The general consensus from those who have heard her speak is that she is the adult in the room, a voice of reason in an industry that has given people cause for concern. 'I felt I had a skill set that Open AI needed. It definitely was going to need to raise money, needed to be kind of respected in the markets with investors. It hadn't really had a business plan. Finance without strategy is really directionless, but strategy with no finance is totally toothless – no one can get anything done. 'I felt like I could bring that,' she says. 'Also it was a company that was growing at speed, and then culture is really important. So I felt like I could be that leader that isn't just going to stay in my lane.' OpenAI lit a fire under the generative AI industry when it surprised the tech world with the public launch of ChatGPT . There were teething problems, particularly around hallucinations, where the technology would make up facts and supply inaccurate information to queries. But Friar says many of those early issues have been resolved, or at least vastly improved. The introduction of reasoning models has also made the technology smarter, and ChatGPT now has memory so it can learn from its interactions with people. Friar is a frequent user of AI herself, a habit that predates her time at OpenAI. 'I was definitely one of those people who was on the wait list the minute [ChatGPT] hit Silicon Valley, and everybody wanted it. First, all I did was create rhymes. For Nextdoor, I did my holiday speech to the company in rhyme, which I thought was so clever and I'm mortified,' she says. 'That's versus moving to real outcomes today: personalised education in school, drug discovery.' She points to Moderna, which uses the technology for personalised doses for vaccines, college students using ChatGPT as an educational aid to learn about complex problems. Finance without strategy is really directionless, but strategy with no finance is totally toothless – no one can get anything done — Sarah Friar It also functions well as a wine sommelier, Friar says, particularly with the technology's ability to use your phone's camera. 'I take a photograph of the label, and you can say, tell me about this wine. What should it pair with? How should it taste like? Is it good to drink now?' Since Friar joined, OpenAI has announced two funding rounds: the $6.6 billion (€5.8 billion) Series E funding round in October 2024, and the blockbuster $40 billion round in March, the largest private tech funding round to date. In total, the company has raised $57.9 billion across 11 funding rounds, with backers that include Microsoft and Softbank. AI is widely considered a bit of a money pit, one that the companies involved are hoping will pay off. Innovation and ambition are expensive, not to mention the ongoing cost of serving up answers to queries and deeper research requests. These days, ChatGPT offers a range of subscriptions for users who want to get more out of the system – unlimited use, building their own custom GPTs, enterprise-level access. But the majority of OpenAI's users – 95 per cent, Friar says – are still on the free plan. OpenAI has no plans to try to force these users to pay. Instead, it will use the more expensive subscriptions to support that access. ChatGPT's plans range from $20 to $200 a month. 'We needed to build a business model that continues to support a lot of free use,' she explains. 'For all the rolling of eyes on the Twitterverse, for people who want to do a lot of coding, a lot of deep research, things that take a lot of tokens, they are delighted to kind of pay that amount of money. 'If you take my husband, he's an investor. He effectively thinks of Deep Research as like his analyst, and he's like $200 a month. I would not even get an analyst to work for me for a month for that. And so I think if you see the value, you get there.' Although OpenAI does not specify revenue figures for its products individually, Friar says the $200 a month ChatGPT Pro hit one milestone sooner than the rest - reaching $100 million in annual recurring revenue in a short time. The bulk of OpenAI's users are outside the US, necessitating its overseas expansion. This is where Ireland has benefited; OpenAI has made Ireland its European headquarters, a point of pride for Friar, who is originally from Co Down. There are plans to grow the Irish office, she says, as OpenAI seeks to expands its European presence. 'We do have a very vibrant Dublin office that is starting to grow and it will get big over time because it can be an office ... where we can put research and apply it potentially over time,' she says. 'It's a really good place for what we call FDEs – forward deployed engineers – who tend to work alongside a customer to help bring their wildest AI dreams to some sort of fruition. So we are definitely investing in Dublin.' However, the EU does not have the greatest reputation among companies that are trying to move fast and create a new industry, with regulations intended to put guardrails on technologies such as AI seen as a hindrance to the sector. Friar says that while OpenAI welcomes regulation, it is possible to overdo things. 'Particularly in a young technology where we're still all somewhat figuring out and it's moving at the speed of light,' she says, 'I think you can get into a way over-regulated environment and I think that's the place where the EU does need to be careful and mindful.' As the technology has advanced, so have concerns about its use and the potential for bad actors to weaponise AI. 'Am I worried about deep fakes ? Yes; that's a malicious actor moment. But also, if someone's going to stop it, I think it's technology on the other side. I think this goes back to being responsible with what we roll out,' says Friar. 'We don't say that we've got it all, we know everything, because that would not be very humble and also not very true. But this is where we have to go – work with regulators, work with governments, work with research institutes. 'And I think if you get enough of the right, the good people on one side, you'll continue to keep the technology safe but you're not going to be able to keep it in a box. It's just not a tenable outcome.' OpenAI has made some big moves recently. The company has signed up Jony Ive, the former Apple designer, to create a device that will bring AI to people without relying on a smartphone. The device itself remains a mystery for now, but Friar seems enthusiastic about the partnership. 'Every tech era has had the thing, the substrate. The internet age, I don't know if it happens without the PC,' she says. 'When you got to the mobile phone era, the touch screen is what made the phone. 'In the world of AI, we are still, like, these devices force us to talk with our thumbs. How do we create a much more holistic view of a substrate to work on top of it? I don't think we've had that springboard moment where we're like, oh, there's all of this intelligence, now what could really happen?' Ive, she says, has done really well in the last two big generation shifts in the tech industry. But it isn't just about him; there is a whole team behind his IO company with the expertise to take the ideas into reality. [ Can Jony Ive replicate the Apple magic at OpenAI? Opens in new window ] The stakes are high on this one. Not only has the company spent $6.5 billion on buying IO, but it is also trying to succeed where others – most notably the Humane AI Pin – have crashed and burned. Sold off for parts to HP, Humane now lives on as a cautionary tale. But OpenAI seems confident that the partnership with Ive will pay off. 'What we've bought with IO is that holistic picture,' Friar says. 'Maybe we're not the folks who will win on the device, but we've certainly injected a lot of excitement into the ecosystem right now, and I think that's only good for, ultimately, where we're trying to go in the age of intelligence if the whole ecosystem is vibrant.'

First date police car pile-up driver detained
First date police car pile-up driver detained

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

First date police car pile-up driver detained

A personal trainer who caused a pile-up of police cars after fleeing from them while driving home from a first date has been sentenced to 14 months in a young offenders institution. Seven officers were injured and five police cars damaged in the crash caused by 20-year-old Mazyar Azarbonyad. It happened on the A1 near Denton Burn, Newcastle, at about 02:30 BST on 9 April. Azarbonyad, from Stanley in County Durham, previously admitted dangerous driving and driving again in the days after the crash despite being given an interim ban. With the woman he was on a date with in the passenger seat, he turned on to the A1 and reached speeds of up to 120 mph before the huge crash near the Denton roundabout. Newcastle Crown Court heard she had pleaded with him to stop, fearing he would kill someone. The woman, in her 20s, is currently on bail pending further inquiries into the suspected possession of Class A and B drugs. The court previously heard how Azarbonyad sped away from officers who tried to stop him in Swalwell, Gateshead, after they noticed a defective rear light on his BMW. Following a pursuit, he hit his brakes and came to an emergency stop, going from 119 mph to a standstill in a matter of metres. At the time he only had a provisional driving licence, had no car insurance and had paid for three driving lessons. Azarbonyad was also banned from driving for three years. The court was told he already had eight points on his licence from two previous convictions in September 2023. Follow BBC Newcastle on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. Sentencing delay for man who caused A1 police crash Man admits dangerous driving in police crash HM Courts & Tribunals Service

Council urged to stop 'uncontrolled transformation'
Council urged to stop 'uncontrolled transformation'

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Council urged to stop 'uncontrolled transformation'

A petition is calling on a council to stop the "uncontrolled transformation" of a neighbourhood. Residents of Greenbank Road in Darlington want measures to be put in place to stop landlords turning properties into houses of multiple occupation (HMOs). "Darlington Borough Council has lost control of the HMO situation in our neighbourhood," a letter to residents said. The authority said it was looking into measures it could implement to address the concerns. There are about 400 HMOs in Darlington, according to the council. HMOs are used by residents, often students or young professionals, who rent their bedrooms and share living facilities. Current rules mean that planning permission for an HMO is only needed when it will house more than five people. Specific measures – called an Article Four direction – can be implemented to require the landlord to seek permission for smaller HMOs. The Greenbank Road residents' petition said the council had "no way" of knowing how many houses had already been turned into HMOs and called for the Article Four direction to be made in their area. "[The council] cannot make reasonable planning decisions by assessing the impact of new, large HMOs on our local streets if they don't know the scale of the local problem," it said. A spokesman at Darlington Borough Council said HMOs provided "a valuable contribution to housing provision for people who could not access the housing market through home ownership or rental. They added: "We also recognise that a concentration of unregulated HMOs can cause issues for neighbouring residents." The authority said while its own policies provided guidance for considering applications for larger HMOs, it did not cover those with fewer than five occupants. "We have been working hard to look into measures, such as an Article Four direction, that can be introduced at the earliest opportunity to help control those smaller HMOs." Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. Council to demand planning permission for all HMOs HMO petition calls for council to extend curbs Darlington Borough Council

A man joked about a mayor's legal trouble. Then, a subpoena arrived.
A man joked about a mayor's legal trouble. Then, a subpoena arrived.

Washington Post

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Washington Post

A man joked about a mayor's legal trouble. Then, a subpoena arrived.

When a 15-year-old boy disappeared in Riverview, Missouri, last month, James Carroll posted a photo of the boy in the city's Nextdoor group with a joke: 'Someone check Riverview's mayor's basement!' Carroll said his online comment in early April was an attempt to alert the city's residents to a past lawsuit accusing Mayor Michael Cornell of luring a man from Texas with a promise of a job only to fire him for rejecting Cornell's sexual advances.

Genetic breast cancer test was 'life saving'
Genetic breast cancer test was 'life saving'

Yahoo

time27-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Genetic breast cancer test was 'life saving'

A woman who discovered she had a higher risk of developing breast cancer has praised the science centre where she was tested. Abbie Yorke, from Bishop Auckland, County Durham, was diagnosed with a BRCA gene variant by a team at Newcastle's Life Science Centre in 2022. The variant increases a person's risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer. "It almost felt like I could act upon it to safeguard me but also my little boys," she said. Ms Yorke went on to have a preventive double mastectomy in 2024. She said she was "very proud" of the science centre - which has celebrated its 25th anniversary - and called the team who helped her "life saving". The Life Science Centre was officially opened by Elizabeth II in May 2000 and has since been home to medical research and treatment, spanning fertility to diseases including cancer. Lindsey Power, from Newcastle, said whenever she drives through the city she always points out the site to her triplets. "It was always my dream to have a baby and I knew that I would have to go down the IVF route or the fertility route," she said. After seeking help from the fertility centre at the site, she recalled seeing the first scan of her children in 2022. "I'll never forget [it]," she said. "There were two sacs there… it was confirmed just before Christmas – there's triplets there." She said the team "from start to end were fantastic". Linda Conlan, chief executive of Life, said: "Over that quarter century there have been numerous breakthroughs in medical research, which have enhanced the lives of so many people. "It's been a rollercoaster of a 25 years." Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram. Queen's visit left schoolchildren 'in awe' BBC Sounds: Prestigious award given to Centre for Life CEO Linda Conlon Life Science Centre

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