AI as the greatest source of empowerment for all
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source ↗AI as the greatest source of empowerment for all | OpenAI
July 21, 2025
AI as thegreatest source ofempowerment for all
Fidji Simo
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In a few weeks, I’ll be joining OpenAI as CEO of Applications, helping get OpenAI’s technologies into the hands of more people around the world.
I’ve always considered myself a pragmatic technologist—someone who loves technology not for its own sake, but for the direct impact it can have on people’s lives. That’s what makes this job so exciting, since I believe AI will unlock more opportunities for more people than any other technology in history. If we get this right, AI can give everyone more power than ever.
But I also realize those opportunities won’t magically appear on their own.
Every major technology shift can expand access to power—the power to make better decisions, shape the world around us, and control our own destiny in new ways. But it can also further concentrate wealth and power in the hands of a few—usually people who already have money, credentials, and connections.
That’s why we have to be intentional about how we build and share these technologies so they lead to greater opportunity and prosperity for more people. The choices we make today will shape whether the coming transformation leads to greater empowerment for all, or greater concentration of wealth and power for the few.
We can start by making sure the keys to empowerment and opportunity—knowledge, health, creative expression, economic freedom, time, and support—are widely available. You can read more below about the potential AI has to transform each of these aspects of people’s lives.
If we can make intelligence accessible everywhere, affordable to everyone, and easy to understand, we can drive the biggest opportunity engine the world has ever seen and help more people live better lives. I’m looking forward to building this future alongside my brilliant new colleagues at OpenAI, and I’ll have a lot more to share soon.
Fidji.
Knowledge
Empowerment starts with understanding the world around us and our place in it. When we have the right knowledge at the right time, we can make better decisions, advocate for ourselves, and change our path. But for most of history, access to expert-level knowledge has been limited to those with more resources. That’s starting to change. For the first time, AI has the power to truly democratize knowledge and the opportunity it brings.
AI can compress thousands of hours of learning into personalized insights delivered in plain language, at the pace that suits us, responsive to our specific level of understanding. It doesn’t just answer questions—it teaches us to ask better ones. And it helps us develop confidence in areas that once felt opaque or intimidating, growing both personally and professionally.
It’s already working: people who use AI tutors learn twice as much as they do from human ones, and the gains are even bigger compared to learning in a traditional classroom. In a 2024 OpenAI study, 90% of users said ChatGPT helped them “understand complex ideas more easily.” Once we put a personalized AI tutor on every topic at everyone’s fingertips, AI will close the gap between people who have the resources to learn and people who have historically been left behind.
Health
Personally, I am most excited for the breakthroughs that AI will generate in healthcare.
A few years ago, I faced a complex and poorly understood chronic illness, and it became painfully clear just how fragmented and inaccessible the healthcare system can be. Even with access to some of the best doctors in the world, I found myself acting as the connector—piecing together insights from multiple specialists who weren’t speaking to each other.
And I’m not alone. Nearly nine in 10 U.S. adults struggle to understand and use health information, which leads to worse outcomes and more than $200 billion in avoidable healthcare costs every year. Patients often feel powerless in their own care, and dependent on others to explain what’s happening in their bodies.
I dealt with that feeling by hiring a tutor from Stanford to teach me biology and genetics and eventually founded a research institute focused on chronic illnesses. Needless to say, most people don’t have the resources to take such intensive measures—and with AI, they won’t have to.
AI can explain lab results, decode medical jargon, offer second opinions, and help patients understand their options in plain language. It won’t replace doctors, but it can finally level the playing field for patients, putting them in the driver seat of their own care.
AI can also make sure that health decisions don’t just happen in the doctor’s office. The biggest levers for preventing disease and optimizing health outcomes—sleep, food, movement, stress management, connection—all depend on everyday habits. AI can help us build those habits through small, achievable, daily steps with personalized, real-time nudges. Beyond diagnostics and accelerated drug development, this is one of the most profound uses of AI in healthcare: an always-on companion that bridges knowledge gaps, reinforces good habits, and empowers people to take charge of their own health with confidence and clarity.
Creative expression
I believe that we are all born creators, and that the ability to imagine something and make it real is a big part of what makes us human. The problem is that our ability to express that creativity is often limited by our skill sets. Not everyone has the resources, time, or training to paint, write, compose, or build.
When I imagine the future, it often comes to me in images. I paint in my spare time, but the images in my head are so much more realistic and complex than what I am able to paint today. Now, AI is collapsing the distance between imagination and execution. With AI and image generation, I can prompt and iterate until the output matches the complexity and realism of the vision in my head. Today, nearly one in three Gen Z users say AI tools have helped them express themselves in ways they never could before.
That doesn’t take away from the magic of painting. I still paint—in fact, being able to see my visions on the screen helps me to get them onto canvas. But if AI gives everyone access to the tools to transform their ideas into images, stories, or songs, it will make the world a much richer place.
Economic freedom
When people can independently create and capture value, they gain…
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Notability
notability 3.0/10Opinion piece, no technical novelty