Today Artificial Intelligence is no longer some experimental tech; it is changing industries and industry on a larger scale. AI is making industries and competition more effective, whether they're in automation, predictive analytics, generative content, or robotics. But the opinions of even some of the biggest entrepreneurs in the world are not uniform. Is AI humanity’s greatest productivity tool? Or does it raise risks that require tight oversight? Here are 10 very real entrepreneurs and business leaders and their open-about opinions of AI—reintroduced in the same way you gave it to me and the rest of us earlier.

1. Sam Altman: CEO, OpenAI (Artificial Intelligence Industry)

AI will alter almost every aspect of the economy, Sam Altman thinks. He has consistently said AI will revolutionize the job market — but not necessarily devalue humans. “AI’s not going to replace humans,” he had made the statement in several interviews. “But humans who use AI will replace those who don’t.” Altman promotes responsibility in development, also warns of possible misuse, calling for regulatory and international cooperation. AI is a powerful tool for him — but one that has to be congruent with human values.

2. Mark Cuban: Entrepreneur & Investor (Technology & Startups)

Mark Cuban views AI as a huge learning accelerator. He urges entrepreneurs to experiment with AI tools and not dread them. He has articulated the ways in which AI can vastly enhance productivity and learning — but cautions that depending on it in the absence of a handle on its building blocks can lead to dependency. For Cuban, AI sets him at a competitive advantage if he is willing to learn, accept change, and innovate.

3. Elon Musk: CEO, Tesla & SpaceX (Technology & Automotive Industry)

Elon Musk has long expressed concern about AI’s long-term dangers. He has labelled advanced AI potentially dangerous if built without defenses. Musk is heavy on investing in AI through his ventures, but says regulation and safety research will have big implications. His position is unambiguous: AI possesses immense capabilities — but if not regulated carefully, it could represent significant global dangers.

4. Sundar Pichai: CEO, Alphabet (Google) (Technology Industry)

In fact, Sundar Pichai has described AI as one of humanity’s most profound technologies — like electricity or fire. He sees AI augmenting human beings’ abilities in health, education, and communication. But he also emphasizes responsible use of AI, transparency, and fairness. With Pichai’s approach, AI is a foundational innovation that needs to be thoughtfully formulated.

5. Jensen Huang: CEO, NVIDIA (Semiconductor & AI Hardware Industry)

Jensen Huang thinks of AI as something that redefines computing itself. Under his watch, NVIDIA has played a pivotal role in the world’s AI infrastructure boom. Users will not necessarily lose jobs to AI immediately — but to somebody who uses AI more effectively, he explains. Huang views AI as an asset, a tool that rewards players with skill, agility, and versatility.

6. Reid Hoffman; Co-Founder, LinkedIn (Technology & Venture Capital)

Reid Hoffman calls AI an “intelligence amplifier.” He believes AI can scale up creativity; take entrepreneurship, creative solutions, even big-bangs at a global scale; he believes in AI's ability to expand entrepreneurship and improve problem-solving opportunities. On the other hand, he also warns that society needs to grapple with the prospect of AI deeply rather than avoid it out of fear; as a result, people must confront it. Hoffman says AI can expand human potential when used responsibly.

7. Andrew Ng; Co-Founder, Google Brain & Coursera (AI & Education Industry)

Andrew Ng compares AI’s influence to electricity — which will power almost every industry. He has frequently criticized blown-out fears about AI, saying logistical implementation difficulties are more urgent than far-off existential threats. Ng considers AI an engineering and business opportunity that ought to be approached pragmatically.

8. Satya Nadella: CEO, Microsoft (Technology Industry)

Satya Nadella views AI as a co-pilot for productivity. Microsoft’s ability to integrate AI across its products is based on his philosophy that AI ought to augment human work. He stresses ethical AI standards, such as fairness, reliability, privacy, and accountability. For Nadella, AI is a force for empowerment — if it’s overseen by good governance.

9. Peter Thiel: Co-Founder, PayPal & Palantir (Technology & Venture Capital)

Peter Thiel adopts a more measured perspective. Although he acknowledges AI’s importance, he asks whether it can do it all on its own to address broader technological stasis. Innovation needs bold thinking — beyond incremental AI advances. For Thiel, yes, AI matters — yet AI is not the panacea for every economic problem.

10. Ginni Rometty: Former CEO, IBM (Enterprise Technology Industry)

Ginni Rometty has repeatedly asserted that AI will do more than just replace jobs — it’ll change the way we work. She highlights reskilling and adapting the workforce as critical reactions to AI adoption. Her take: The outcome of AI largely depends on how organizations prep people for transformation.

Final Perspective

Final Perspective. A pattern emerges across industries:


Leaders can draw from both opportunity and productivity gains. Others emphasize risk, governance, and ethical obligation. Almost everyone agrees that human involvement is still necessary. The general business consensus seems to be the following:

AI is neither a direct friend nor enemy — it’s a multiplier. Our future will not be AI vs. humans. It’ll be AI with humans, as guided by responsible leadership and strategic implementation.