worksKeach HageyThe Optimist: Sam Altman, OpenAI, and the Race to Invent the FuturebookFrom an acclaimed Wall Street Journal reporter comes the first biography of the enigmatic leader of the AI revolution, charting his ascent within the tech world as well as his ambitions for this powerful new technology
The Optimist: Sam Altman, OpenAI, and the Race to Invent the Future
Keach Hagey
New York, 2025
Abstract
From an acclaimed Wall Street Journal reporter comes the first biography of the enigmatic leader of the AI revolution, charting his ascent within the tech world as well as his ambitions for this powerful new technology
Quotes from this work
It was painting that led to both the means and the ideas behind Y Combinator. In January of 1995, needing money, Graham convinced his best friend, Robert Tappan Morris, to start a company with him called Artix that would put art galleries on the web. Morris was a Harvard graduate student with the impeccable hacker cred of having been the first person convicted under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, after he accidentally unleashed the first computer worm. The code behind the new company worked brilliantly. But the business idea, they soon realized, was idiotic.
Art galleries did not have the faintest desire to put their wares online for anyone to see. They wanted to preserve the illusion that the small slice of their merchandise that they were displaying was special, rather than inventory that had been kicking around in storage for years. Gallerists viewed the art market’s inefficiency and opacity as a feature, not a bug.