Right now, in a San Francisco courtroom, two of the most powerful people in tech are fighting over who gets to define "responsible AI."
One warned that AI could kill us all, then admitted his own company copies the competitor's models he is suing for being closed.
The other built a nonprofit to protect humanity from AI risk. It is now approaching a trillion-dollar valuation.
While they fight over definitions, most people are asking much simpler questions:
- Is my job going to be okay?
- Can I actually trust these tools?
- Who is building this for people like me?
Those questions deserve real answers. Not press releases. Not courtroom testimony. Not whichever billionaire sounds more convincing that week.
That is why we are building Algorism. Not a lab. Not another AI product. A place where regular people can understand what is actually happening with AI, the technology, the incentives, the tradeoffs, without needing a law degree or a computer science degree to follow along.
The future of AI is too important to be decided only by the people fighting to control it. It should make sense to the rest of us too.