[Interview Simulation: Steve Jobs in 2025]
Setting: A minimalist, sunlit stage at Apple Park. Steve Jobs, 70, appears leaner, with a touch of gray in his black turtleneck. The audience leans forward, captivated. The host, a tech journalist, begins.
Host: Mr. Jobs, it’s an honor. In 2025, AI is everywhere. But you’ve always said technology should “serve humans, not the other way around.” Where do we stand today?
Jobs: [leans forward, hands gesturing]
“Right now, most AI feels like a calculator that can talk. Useful, but not magical. The real question is: Does it make us better humans? At Apple, we’re not interested in AI that just mimics or optimizes. We want AI that amplifies human genius. Think of it as the next pencil—or the next piano. Tools that don’t replace creativity, but unlock it.”
Host: But critics argue AI threatens creativity itself. Can algorithms ever be “original”?
Jobs: [smirks]
“Let me tell you a secret: All creativity is iteration. Da Vinci, Dylan, my friend Jony Ive—they stole ideas, remixed them, ‘till they were new. AI isn’t the artist; it’s the brush. Imagine a composer who’s never heard a symphony—AI could let them hear one in their head. But the soul? That’s still the human. The danger isn’t AI being unoriginal. It’s humans being lazy enough to let it replace the hard work of imagination.”
Host: Ethics is a big debate. Bias, job loss, misinformation. How should we govern AI?
Jobs: [pauses, intense]
“Ethics isn’t a feature you tack on later. It’s the design. Most companies build AI in secret labs, trained on data that reflects the world’s worst instincts. Apple’s approach? [leans in] We train AI on humanity’s best instincts. Art museums, scientific breakthroughs, conversations between teachers and students. And we make it private by default. If AI can’t protect your data, it can’t protect your dignity.”
Host: Apple’s AI “ecosystem” is famous for its walls. Critics say that stifles progress.
Jobs: [snaps back]
“Openness without values is chaos. The web was supposed to connect us—it became a dumpster fire. Apple’s walls exist to create a sanctuary. Imagine a garden: You don’t let weeds strangle the flowers. Our AI doesn’t just ‘scale’; it learns from people, not ads. If you want a tool that respects your time, your thoughts, your humanity? That’s not a walled garden. That’s a protected space to grow.”
Host: How will AI change education?
Jobs: [softens tone]
“Every child deserves a tutor who knows them better than anyone. AI will be that tutor. Not a robot teacher—[mimics a stiff robot] ‘Today, we learn algebra!’—but a partner. It’ll sense when a student’s frustrated, or bored, or ‘Ah, I get it!’ That spark. Schools today are assembly lines from the 19th century. AI will let us build a world where every kid learns at their own pace, chasing their own curiosity.”
Host: And healthcare?
Jobs: [grins]
“We’re making the body a hackable platform. Imagine an Apple Watch that doesn’t just track your steps but predicts a heart attack weeks in advance. Or an AI that learns your speech patterns to catch early Alzheimer’s. This isn’t sci-fi. It’s happening. But again—data stays on your device. Your health isn’t a product for advertisers.”
Host: Privacy vs. convenience is the tightrope. Can we have both?
Jobs: [steepled fingers]
“Of course. The best technology disappears. You don’t ‘use’ our AI; it anticipates. You wake up, and your home knows you’re tired—it dims the lights, plays a song. Not because you asked, but because it’s learned your rhythms. But if you don’t trust it, it’s useless. Privacy is the foundation of trust. Without trust, you’ve got a fancy toy. Not a revolution.”
Host: Finally, what’s your vision for AI’s role in humanity’s future?
Jobs: [gazes at the audience]
“Back in ’84, we said the Mac would put ‘a computer in every home.’ People laughed. Today, AI could be the most personal tool ever invented. But its purpose isn’t to replace us—it’s to remind us how miraculous we are. When we launched the iPhone, I said it would ‘change everything.’ This?” [taps the stage]
“It’ll change what it means to be human. And if we design it right… we’ll look back and say AI didn’t make us less human. It helped us become more.”
[Audience erupts in applause. Jobs waves modestly, exits with a nod.]
Host: [to the camera]
“There you have it—2025 through the eyes of a man who never stopped believing that the future belongs to those who dare to think different.”
[End simulation.]
Note: This interview is fictional. Steve Jobs passed away in 2011. His legacy, however, continues to shape debates about technology’s role in society.