# What 81,000 People Want From AI | This Week in AI

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** DataCamp
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOVt2oSc_b8

## Содержание

### [0:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOVt2oSc_b8) Segment 1 (00:00 - 03:00)

Mistral goes open. Nvidia launches Neoclaw. OpenAI ships GPT 5. 4 Mini and Nano. Google turns Stitch into a Vibe design tool. And Anthropic reveals what 81,000 people actually want from AI. Welcome to this week in AI based on the median by data camp. Mistl announced a wave of updates this week including small four, Forge and Leon. The real story is not just a new model. It is strategy. Mistral is pushing hard on open-source and enterprise customization while also joining NVIDIA's new Neatron coalition to help build future open foundation models. NVIDIA used GTC to introduce Nemo Claw, a new tool designed to make autonomous agents easier and safer to run inside businesses. The idea is simple. Keep sensitive data local and only send the hardest tasks to larger cloud models. NVIDIA also introduced more infrastructure updates all pointing in the same direction. Open AAI expanded the GPT 5. 4 family with mini and nano. These are smaller, cheaper models built for high volume work like coding, classification, extraction and sub aents. And this is becoming a standard pattern in AI systems now. One large model handles planning, smaller models handle execution. Google also upgraded Stitch into what it calls a vibe design tool. Instead of starting with wireframes, users can describe a product goal, a mood, or a business outcome. And Stitch turns that into interface ideas using text, images, code, and voice. Design is starting to look a lot more like prompting. But the most interesting story this week came from Anthropic. The company ran a massive study across more than 81,000 people in 159 countries to understand what people actually want from AI and what they fear most about it. And the answer is more human than technical. People do not just want AI to help them work faster. They live better. Yes, the biggest group still wants professional excellence. They want help with routine tasks so they can focus on more valuable work. But a huge number of people also talked about time freedom, life management, personal growth, financial independence, and even social change. For many users, AI is not just a productivity tool. It is a quality of life tool. But that optimism comes with real anxiety. The biggest concern people raised was unreliability, bad answers, hallucinations, the extra time it takes to doublech checkck the model's work. Right behind that came fears about jobs and the economy. And close behind that was something deeper, the fear of losing human autonomy. People worry that they may become too dependent on these systems or slowly hand over too much judgment to them. Anthropic describes this tension as the light and shade of AI. The same things people value most can also create the biggest risks. People use AI to learn but worry it weakens their thinking. They use it for emotional support but fear dependence. They use it to save time, then realize that checking the outputs can eat those gains right back. So, the takeaway this week is not that people are simply optimistic or pessimistic about AI. It is that they want useful AI, but they want it on human terms, reliable, supportive, and ultimately in service of a better life, not just more output. And this was this week in AI based on the median by data camp. For the full breakdown and deeper analysis behind these stories, subscribe to the newsletter using the link in the description. Thank you for watching and I'll see you next week.

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*Источник: https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/38842*