
Last Thursday at primaTV, I spoke openly about the AI revolution that’s already transforming the world—an innovation as profound as the birth of the internet itself.

AI models today shape our lives, economies, and societies at an unprecedented scale. Yet, behind these advancements lies a troubling truth: the giant corporations who provide these technologies grow powerful using our money, our data, often without transparency or accountability.
The real question is: When these companies reach Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)—the moment machines surpass human-level intelligence—who will benefit?
Sam Altman famously said:
“We’ll ask the AGI how to pay back our investors.”
Notice anything? Humanity isn’t part of the equation.
In the interview, I compared AI’s growth to bamboo:
“AI today is like bamboo—it grows incredibly fast, overtaking everything around it. If we don’t pay attention now, we’ll soon find ourselves living in its shadow, wondering who planted it—and who controls it.”
At ShareAI, we’re working to make sure we don’t just watch that growth happen from the sidelines. By decentralizing AI infrastructure and connecting idle devices and servers, we’re offering people a stake in this transformation—a way to turn unused capacity into impact and revenue.
This isn’t only about technology. It’s about reclaiming agency in a future that will touch every part of our lives.
You can read / watch the interview here:
Let’s make sure that as the bamboo grows, it grows for all of us—not just a few.
Note that less than 2% of the contents of this interview was generated by AI.
You made me curious to check my own article using:
https://quillbot.com/ai-content-detector
In my case, it says 60% was AI-generated. I’m curious—what did you use?
Haha, I was being painfully ironic. Since you got an impressively low 60%, I suppose the discussion veered just far enough off-script to confuse the detectors.
It seems this is the new game: weaving our voices with the machines’, hoping the end result feels just human enough to pass the sniff test — or at least spark a good comment thread.