Empire of AI

Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI

Hardcover, 496 pages

English language

Published 2025 by Penguin Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-0-593-65750-8
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When AI expert and investigative 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, the organization was meant, its leader Sam Altman told us, to act as a check against more purely mercantile, and potentially dangerous, forces. What could go wrong?

Over time, Hao began to wrestle ever more deeply with that question. Increasingly, she realized that the core truth of this massively disruptive sector is that its vision of success requires an almost unprecedented amount of resources: the “compute” power of high-end chips and the processing capacity to create massive large language models, the sheer volume of data that needs to be amassed at scale, the humans “cleaning up” that data for sweatshop wages throughout the Global South, and a truly alarming spike in the usage of energy and water …

3 editions

Page-turning reporting

( em português: sol2070.in/2026/02/empire-of-ai-karen-hao/ )

Empire of AI (2025, 496 pp.) is a meticulous deep dive into OpenAI (of ChatGPT) and the actions of its leaders, by reporter Karen Hao, perhaps the journalist who has covered the corporation most extensively.

As the title suggests, the angle is the creation of a techno-empire, or how new technologies reinforce structures of that kind.

Hao says in the introduction:

While it tells the inside story of OpenAI, that story is meant to be a prism through which to see far beyond this one company. It is a profile of a scientific ambition turned into an aggressive ideological, money-fueled quest; an examination of its multifaceted and expansive footprint; a meditation on power.

The book really goes deep into how technology companies work and, indirectly, how the world works.

In addition to being an impressive piece of …

*The* chronicle of AI, the modern tech industry, and the fools that run it.

In Empire of AI, Karen Hao has built a compelling portrait of the internal workings OpenAI, and through it, a portrait of both the AI movement and the modern tech industry. I hope that everyone who has contemplated bringing AI into their businesses and workflows reads it: the tools and even the promise of the technology has been shaped by these specific people and their assumptions, values, and worldviews.

The title is apt. OpenAI’s approach is empire — this is an organization that seeks to centralize power rather than democratize it. It readily sits on a shelf alongside books like Careless People, but the themes here are sometimes reminiscent of Succession. It’s about power. The whole industry is about power. And Hao lays it out clearly and beautifully.

We’re left with a little sprig of hope in the epilogue. I agree with the premise here: there’s a version …