Sam Altman, founder of OpenAI, carries plan B in his backpack in case AI attacks humanity

MEXICO CITY (apro).– The founder of OpenAI and creator of ChatGPT, Sam Altman, carries a light blue backpack with a plan in case Artificial Intelligence turns against humanity.

Inside it contains a McBook capable of shutting down and destroying all Artificial Intelligence servers if they turn against humanity.

AI creators and techies have refused to be afraid of this technology. Even if ChatGPT is asked if it can turn against human beings, it answers no.

“It is impossible for them to become aware. They are only automatic learning mechanisms, incapable of taking initiative”, the experts pointed out.

But Altman doesn’t agree and that’s why he carries his backpack on his shoulder everywhere and has a second plan:

“Popular discussion topic among my friends: will the end of the world be due to synthetic biology, AI or energy shortages or war,” he said.

And, to take care of himself in either of these two scenarios, Altman has a bunker that would protect him from those threats, where he has what he needs to survive.

Eye scan?

In 2019, Sam Altman founded Worldcoin, a company that has been scanning irises around the world. In Spain he has been more welcome, although no one knows why he is doing it.

So far, 2 million people have accessed iris scanning, but the goal is to reach 2 billion, that is, a quarter of the world’s population.

To achieve this, the company offers the client gifts, cash or a token. He focused on poor countries, such as Kenya, but later he bet on Europe and the United States, El Confidencial reported.

In Madrid, he installed eye stands in seven shopping centers in Madrid where they gave away eight dollars and the token. They got more than 150 thousand scans in one year.

“Everything that has to do with biometrics has a huge problem. You will never be able to change your iris, just like your DNA or fingerprint”, so, if you give them, they already have your data, in addition, “the iris can be read with a remote laser”, indicated Román Ramírez, cybersecurity specialist.

By scanning the iris, they transform it into a numerical code that they encrypt or encrypt “and everything they want to count,” he said.

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