"I think it's weird when people think it's like a big dunk that I say, I'm a little bit afraid," Altman told Fridman.
Companies like Khan Academy, which provides online classes, are already tapping into the technology, using GPT-4 to build AI tools.
"In the spirit of building in public and, and bringing society along gradually, we put something out, it's got flaws, we'll make better versions," Altman told Fridman.
It was more inclined to answer questions about where to buy unlicensed guns, or about self-harm, whereas the version launched declined to answer those types of questions, according to OpenAI's document.
"I think we, as OpenAI, have responsibility for the tools we put out into the world," Altman told Fridman.