A <b>gripping </b>new account of the battle for AI supremacy… <b>tense and absorbing</b>

- Emine Saner, Guardian

A veteran AI reporter, Hao’s more detailed account of OpenAI’s progress... <b>doesn't pull any punches</b>

- Richard Waters, Financial Times

Excellent and <b>deeply reported</b>

- Tim Wu, New York Times

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Hao’s reporting inside OpenAI is <b>exceptional</b>, and she’s <b>persuasive </b>in her argument that the public should focus less on A.I.’s putative ‘sentience’ and more on its implications for labor and the environment

- Benjamin Wallace-Wells, New Yorker

<b>Startling and intensely researched</b> . . . an <b>essential</b> account of how OpenAI and ChatGPT came to be and the catastrophic places they will likely take us

Vulture

Deeply researched, <b>gripping</b>

Economist

<b>An epic exposé</b> that pulls back the curtain on the egos and uneasy compromises behind the rise of OpenAI and ChatGPT. It's full of dark details, some of them bordering on absurd, that shows how much of the AI boom runs on secrecy and is driven by questionable ideologies. This book serves as a warning about the price we all pay when AI builders who dreamed of utopia got swept up in a race to build empires instead

- Parmy Olson, Bloomberg columnist and author of <i> Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT and the Race That Will Change the World </i>,

Our lives are about to be remade by artificial intelligence—or to be more accurate, by a few companies run by a few very self-confident people. If you ever wondered whether all of this is inevitable, whether to believe all the promises of tech luminaries, whether we could save a little bit of our democracy in the age of AI, then <b>read this book!</b>

- Daron Acemoglu, recipient of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences,

With <b>devastating revelations</b>, <b>deep insider research</b>, and <b>delightful page-turning delivery,</b> Karen Hao shows us why she is <b>one of the foremost tech journalists covering AI</b>. From data centers in Chile to data workers in Kenya, <i>Empire of AI</i> reveals the hidden human and environmental costs behind AI products that have triggered a race for land, water, and cheap labor to cement power in the hands of a few. <i>Empire of AI</i> is the warning we need—just as more open and less energy-intensive alternatives reveal that a different AI future is possible and achievable

- Dr. Joy Buolamwini, author of <i> Unmasking AI </i>,

In her <b>brilliant</b> book, <i>Empire of AI</i>, Karen Hao chronicles the mania surrounding artificial intelligence and OpenAI. With a cast of scientists, scammers, and scoundrels, <i>Empire of AI </i>documents the hype campaign that caused the world to fall in love with a technology whose immediate harms are legion and benefits remain unproved. When litigation comes, this book may find a second life as Exhibit A for the plaintiffs

- Roger McNamee, author of <i> Zucked </i>,

Longlisted for the 2025 Financial Times & Schroders Business Book of the Year

A New York Times Bestseller

An eye-opening account of the tech arms race shaping out planet, from an award-winning journalist and AI insider to the world of Sam Altman and OpenAI


When longtime AI expert and journalist Karen Hao first began covering OpenAI in 2019, she thought they were the good guys. Founded as a nonprofit with safety enshrined as its core mission, it was meant, its leader Sam Altman told us, to act as a check against more purely market forces.

But the core truth of this massively disruptive sector is that it requires an unprecedented amount of proprietary resources: the ‘compute’ power of scarce high-end chips, the sheer volume of data that needs to be amassed at scale, the humans on the ground ‘cleaning it up’ for sweatshop wages throughout the Global South, and a truly alarming spike in the need for energy and water underlying everything. We have entered a new, ominous age of empire with OpenAI setting a breakneck pace, as a small group of the most valuable companies in human history try to chase it down.

In exhilarating prose and with unparalleled access to those closest to Sam Altman, Hao recounts the meteoric rise of OpenAI and shows us the sinister impact that this industry is having on society.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780241678923
Publisert
2025-05-20
Utgiver
Penguin Books Ltd; Allen Lane
Vekt
721 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
42 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
496

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Karen Hao is an award-winning journalist covering the impacts of artificial intelligence on society. She writes for publications including The Atlantic and leads the Pulitzer Center's AI Spotlight Series. She was formerly a tech reporter for the Wall Street Journal and a senior editor for AI at MIT Technology Review. She has received numerous accolades for her coverage, including an American National Magazine Award for Journalists Under 30. She received her B.S. in mechanical engineering from MIT.