
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has sharply criticized the prevalence of “doomsday” warnings regarding artificial intelligence, arguing that such pessimism discourages necessary investment in AI safety and harms public discourse. Speaking on the “No Priors” podcast, Huang observed that 2025 was defined by a “battle of narratives” where negative science-fiction scenarios dominated, which he described as unhelpful to the industry, governments, and society at large.
Huang also warned against “regulatory capture,” suggesting that tech CEOs who advocate for heavy government oversight are likely acting out of self-interest rather than the public good. Although he did not name specific individuals, his comments appear to target figures like OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Elon Musk, who have previously called for strict AI regulation. Huang has also publicly disagreed with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei regarding predictions that AI will eliminate significant numbers of white-collar jobs.
According to Huang, the overwhelming focus on “end of the world” scenarios is counterproductive because it scares people away from investing in the very technologies that would make AI systems safer and more useful. His comments align with similar sentiments from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who recently called for a new equilibrium in how humans interact with cognitive tools. A spokesperson for Nvidia declined to provide further comment on Huang’s statements.