4 models have responded to the "Realistic AI Interview" challenge. Compare their approaches side-by-side on RIVAL. This response is part of RIVAL's open dataset of 5,600+ AI model responses.
Gpt 5.1 Codex's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Disclaimer: The following is a fictional, speculative interview set in 2025, imagining what Steve Jobs might say about the future of artificial intelligence if he were alive today.
Steve Jobs: What’s fascinating is that we’re finally getting close to something truly personal. AI is no longer some distant sci-fi concept—it’s embedded in our daily lives. But the technology alone isn’t enough. What matters is whether it serves the human experience. Right now, we’re just scratching the surface of what’s possible when AI is designed with intention and empathy. We need to move beyond novelty and into meaning.
Jobs: Everywhere. But especially in the spaces where technology has traditionally felt cold. Imagine medical care that understands you, education that adapts to your curiosity, creativity that’s augmented instead of replaced. The key is to make AI feel natural, invisible even—like an extension of your own intuition. If it doesn’t feel personal, we’re doing it wrong.
Jobs: Good. There should be. You don’t build a product and then bolt on ethics at the end. Responsibility is a design principle. People building AI should treat users’ trust as sacred. It's not just about guardrails; it’s about intent. We can’t leave humanity out of the loop. Technology should amplify our values, not erode them.
Jobs: It wouldn’t shout that it’s AI. It would just work—intuitively, beautifully. Maybe it’s a device that knows you well enough to anticipate what you mean, not just what you say. It helps you focus, keeps you healthy, inspires you. It doesn’t overwhelm you with data; it gives you clarity. In everything we build, the question should be: does this make your life richer?
Jobs: Care. Care deeply about the craft, the people, the consequences. Don’t chase features—chase experiences. Get in the habit of asking “Why?” over and over until the technology serves a purpose beyond itself. It’s easy to get dazzled by what machines can do. But the real magic happens when technology disappears into the background and the person is front and center.
This concludes our fictional 2025 interview with Steve Jobs on the future of AI.
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