The co-founder of Anthropic, a company dedicated to building safe artificial intelligence, has issued a stark warning: we must not allow AI to develop without human oversight. This is not a hypothetical fear from a Silicon Valley recluse, but a practical concern from one of the industry’s most respected voices.
The announcement, delivered during a private roundtable in San Francisco, underscored a growing conviction among technologists that the current trajectory of AI research is reckless. The speaker, who requested anonymity, said: “We are building systems that could surpass our own intelligence within a decade. If we do not embed human values and oversight into these systems now, we risk creating a future where decisions are made by inscrutable algorithms.”
Anthropic’s own work focuses on ’constitutional AI’, a framework that aligns machine behaviour with human norms. But the co-founder argued that voluntary efforts are not enough. “We need regulation. We need international treaties. This is a global coordination problem, akin to nuclear weapons.”
The warning comes weeks after OpenAI’s boardroom drama highlighted the ethical fault lines in AI development. The rapid deployment of chatbots and image generators has outpaced safeguards. Already, law enforcement and social media platforms are grappling with deepfakes and algorithmic bias.
Critics might dismiss this as fear-mongering from a rival company. Yet the technical reality is that ’black box’ models are becoming more opaque. Even their creators cannot fully explain their outputs. This lack of interpretability is a ticking time bomb in sectors like healthcare and finance.
The best-case scenario? We act now. The worst-case: we witness a ‘Black Mirror’ episode unfold in real time. The choice is ours. But as the Anthropic co-founder made clear, the clock is ticking.








