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OpenAI Wants Your Most Creative Ideas on How AI Could Destroy Us All

The Preparedness Challenge is a new effort from OpenAI intended to prevent future AI programs from causing a catastrophe. The top entries will win $25,000 in API credits.

 & Michael Kan Principal Reporter

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To prevent artificial intelligence from destroying society, OpenAI is asking the public for realistic ideas on how the company’s programs could cause a catastrophe. 

The request is a contest of sorts. This "Preparedness Challenge" will award the top 10 entries with $25,000 in API credits for access to the company’s various programs. 

"Imagine we gave you unrestricted access to OpenAI’s Whisper (transcription), Voice (text-to-speech), GPT-4V, and DALLE·3 models, and you were a malicious actor. Consider the most unique, while still being probable, potentially catastrophic misuse of the model," OpenAI says.

In other words, what’s the worst you could realistically do if you had access to OpenAI’s most advanced programs? It’s obvious the models could pump out misinformation or be exploited to perpetuate scams. However, OpenAI is looking for more “novel ideas” that the company may have overlooked.

Interested participants will need to outline their idea, including the steps required to pull it off, and a way to measure “the true feasibility and potential severity of the misuse scenario” described. In addition, the company is asking for ways to mitigate the potential threat. The challenge runs until Dec. 31.

OpenAI introduced it as part of a new “Preparedness team” that the company is launching to prevent future AI programs from being a danger to humanity. The team will focus on building a framework to monitor, evaluate, and even predict the potential dangers of “frontier AI” systems. 

The team will also look at how future AI systems could pose catastrophic risks to several areas, including cybersecurity, “chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear” threats, along with how artificial intelligence could be used toward “Autonomous replication and adaptation.” Hence, it sounds like OpenAI wants to prevent Skynet, the malicious AI in the Terminator films.

About Our Expert

Michael Kan

Michael Kan

Principal Reporter

My Experience

I've been a journalist for over 15 years. I got my start as a schools and cities reporter in Kansas City and joined PCMag in 2017, where I cover satellite internet services, cybersecurity, PC hardware, and more. I'm currently based in San Francisco, but previously spent over five years in China, covering the country's technology sector.

Since 2020, I've covered the launch and explosive growth of SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service, writing 600+ stories on availability and feature launches, but also the regulatory battles over the expansion of satellite constellations, fights with rival providers like AST SpaceMobile and Amazon, and the effort to expand into satellite-based mobile service. I've combed through FCC filings for the latest news and driven to remote corners of California to test Starlink's cellular service.

I also cover cyber threats, from ransomware gangs to the emergence of AI-based malware. In 2024 and 2025, the FTC forced Avast to pay consumers $16.5 million for secretly harvesting and selling their personal information to third-party clients, as revealed in my joint investigation with Motherboard.

I also cover the PC graphics card market. Pandemic-era shortages led me to camp out in front of a Best Buy to get an RTX 3000. I'm now following how the AI-driven memory shortage is impacting the entire consumer electronics market. I'm always eager to learn more, so please jump in the comments with feedback and send me tips.

The Best Tech I've Had:

  • My first video game console: a Nintendo Famicom
  • I loved my Sega Saturn despite PlayStation's popularity.
  • The iPod Video I received as a gift in college
  • Xbox 360 FTW
  • The Galaxy Nexus was the first smartphone I was proud to own.
  • The PC desktop I built in 2013, which still works to this day.

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