
""What does it mean about the world we live in that that's even possible," Yekutiel asked, "and if you believe it is a wrong, what is the responsibility of the ultra-wealthy to make it right?""
""creating great technology and great companies is a great thing to do on its own.""
""should pay it forward. And I'm sure he will.""
""Not everyone who makes a ton of money goes on to do good things with it, but""
A public event in San Francisco combined conversation about sports, leadership and artificial intelligence with a pointed confrontation about U.S. wealth inequality. The moderator contrasted Jensen Huang's $179 billion fortune with news that up to 42 million Americans face the loss of SNAP benefits. Sam Altman defended Huang's contributions and described creating technology and companies as valuable, while asserting that those who benefit from society's infrastructure should pay back. The question about hunger and responsibility drew strong audience reaction and highlighted tensions between massive private wealth and widespread public need.
Read at SFGATE
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]