Silicon Valley stifled the AI doom movement in 2024

For several years now, technologists have rung alarm bells about the potential for advanced AI systems to cause catastrophic damage to the human race.

But in 2024, those warning calls were drowned out by a practical and prosperous vision of generative AI promoted by the tech industry -- a vision that also benefited their wallets.

Those warning of catastrophic AI risk are often called "AI doomers," though it's not a name they're fond of. They're worried that AI systems will make decisions to kill people, be used by the powerful to oppress the masses, or contribute to the downfall of society in one way or another.

In 2023, it seemed like we were in the beginning of a renaissance era for technology regulation. AI doom and AI safety — a broader subject that can encompass hallucinations, insufficient content moderation, and other ways AI can harm society — went from a niche topic discussed in San Francisco coffee shops to a conversation appearing on MSNBC, CNN, and the front pages of The New York Times.

To sum up the warnings issued in 2023: Elon Musk and more than 1,000 technologists and scientists called for a pause on AI development, asking the world to prepare for the technology's profound risks. Shortly after, top scientists at OpenAI, Google, and other labs signed an open letter saying the risk of AI causing human extinction should be given more credence. Months later, President Biden signed an AI executive order with a general goal to protect Americans from AI systems. In November 2023, the nonprofit board behind the world's leading AI developer, OpenAI, fired Sam Altman, claiming its CEO had a reputation for lying and couldn't be trusted with a technology as important as artificial general intelligence, or AGI — once the imagined endpoint of AI, meaning systems that actually show self-awareness. (Although the definition is now shifting to meet the business needs of those talking about it.)

For a moment, it seemed as if the dreams of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs would take a backseat to the overall health of society.

But to those entrepreneurs, the narrative around AI doom was more concerning than the AI models themselves.

In response, a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen published "Why AI will save the world" in June 2023, a 7,000-word essay dismantling the AI doomers' agenda and presenting a more optimistic vision of how the technology will play out.

Marc Andreessen speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt.
Entrepreneur Marc Andreessen speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2016 at Pier 48 on September 13, 2016 in San Francisco, California.Image Credits:Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch

"The era of Artificial Intelligence is here, and boy are people freaking out. Fortunately, I am here to bring the good news: AI will not destroy the world, and in fact may save it," said Andreessen in the essay.