A gripping new account of the battle for AI supremacy tense and absorbing -- Emine Saner * Guardian * A veteran AI reporter, Haos more detailed account of OpenAIs progress... doesn't pull any punches -- Richard Waters * Financial Times * Excellent and deeply reported -- Tim Wu * New York Times * Haos reporting inside OpenAI is exceptional, and shes persuasive in her argument that the public should focus less on A.I.s putative sentience and more on its implications for labor and the environment -- Benjamin Wallace-Wells * New Yorker * Startling and intensely researched . . . an essential account of how OpenAI and ChatGPT came to be and the catastrophic places they will likely take us * Vulture * Deeply researched, gripping * Economist * Hao pulls no punches in describing the building of one of the biggest names in generative AI, focusing her account on the dysfunctional, combative leadership approach of co-founder Sam Altman. She details how his apocalyptic predictions and messianic rhetoric attracted devoted disciples to his cause -- Andrew Hill * Financial Times Best Book of 2025: Business * A bestselling page-turner that has made waves not just in Silicon Valley but around the world . . . With Empire of AI, Hao is fundamentally shaping many peoples perceptions and understanding of the company at the center of the AI revolution * TIME Magazine, TIME100 AI 2025 * An epic exposé that pulls back the curtain on the egos and uneasy compromises behind the rise of OpenAI and ChatGPT. It's full of dark details, some of them bordering on absurd, that shows how much of the AI boom runs on secrecy and is driven by questionable ideologies. This book serves as a warning about the price we all pay when AI builders who dreamed of utopia got swept up in a race to build empires instead -- Parmy Olson, Bloomberg columnist and author of Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT and the Race That Will Change the World Our lives are about to be remade by artificial intelligenceor to be more accurate, by a few companies run by a few very self-confident people. If you ever wondered whether all of this is inevitable, whether to believe all the promises of tech luminaries, whether we could save a little bit of our democracy in the age of AI, then read this book! -- Daron Acemoglu, recipient of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences