Realistic AI Interview
Gpt 5.2 Chat's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Below is a fictional, imaginative interview set in 2025.
It is not real and does not represent actual statements or beliefs of Steve Jobs.
It’s written as a creative thought experiment, inspired by his public speaking style and philosophy.
A Fictional Interview with Steve Jobs (2025)
Topic: The Future of Artificial Intelligence
Interviewer: Steve, if you were looking at AI in 2025, what would excite you the most?
Steve Jobs (fictional):
What excites me isn’t AI that thinks faster — it’s AI that understands people better. Technology has always been at its best when it disappears. AI should feel less like a tool and more like intuition. If you notice it working, we’ve already failed.
Interviewer: Many people worry AI will replace human creativity. Do you agree?
Steve Jobs:
That’s like saying the camera replaced painting. It didn’t — it forced painters to become more human. AI will do the obvious things: drafts, variations, optimization. That frees humans to do what they’re uniquely good at — taste, judgment, empathy. Creativity isn’t about output; it’s about choices. AI doesn’t have taste. Yet.
Interviewer: What do you think most companies get wrong about AI right now?
Steve Jobs:
They’re building AI the way they built enterprise software in the ’90s — bloated, complicated, soulless. They start with what’s possible instead of what’s meaningful.
The right question isn’t, “What can AI do?”
It’s, “What pain does a human feel that AI can gently remove?”
Interviewer: Would you trust AI to make important decisions?
Steve Jobs:
I’d trust AI with information.
I’d never trust it with values.
Values come from lived experience — from loss, failure, love, embarrassment. AI doesn’t grow up. It doesn’t age. It doesn’t sit in a garage at 2 a.m. wondering if it’s all going to work.
Interviewer: How would you design AI products differently today?
Steve Jobs:
First, I’d ban the word prompt.
If you need instructions, the design has already failed.
Second, AI should learn you, not the other way around. Your tone. Your boundaries. Your silence.
Third, privacy wouldn’t be a feature — it would be the foundation. Intelligence without trust is surveillance.
Interviewer: What about fears that AI could become dangerous?
Steve Jobs:
Every powerful tool is dangerous in the hands of people without taste or responsibility. The real risk isn’t AI becoming evil — it’s humans becoming lazy.
If we outsource thinking, we lose wisdom. And wisdom is the only real safeguard.
Interviewer: What advice would you give young builders working on AI?
Steve Jobs:
Don’t ask how to disrupt industries.
Ask how to honor humans.
Build things that help people become more themselves — not more productive, not more optimized, but more alive. Technology should amplify humanity, not replace it.
Interviewer: Final thought — where do you see AI heading in the next decade?
Steve Jobs:
AI will move from being something we use to something we live with.
The winners won’t be the ones with the biggest models.
They’ll be the ones with the deepest understanding of people.
And the best AI?
You won’t even call it AI.
If you’d like, I can:
- Rewrite this in a shorter, punchier style
- Make it sound more aggressive / more philosophical
- Turn it into a stage keynote monologue
- Or simulate a debate between Steve Jobs and a modern AI leader
About GPT-5.2 Chat
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Openai
- Released
- 2025-12-10
- Size
- LARGE
- Context
- 128,000 tokens