From Thinking Machines’ Murati on AI’s Next Chapter · · Bloomberg Live
“I have very high conviction that the way to continue building frontier AI systems is to bring people along and to have humans in the loop. Actually having humans in the loop doesn't quite describe it, because it sounds like a checkpoint where we're signing off something and then you're good to go. It's more like creating systems that are not just like autonomously advancing and leaving civilization behind, but are more like a tandem bike where you know, you have like, both. Both people are peddling, uh, but, you know, when you're going up a hill, maybe whoever is stronger is pedaling harder. But both hands are on the are on the wheel.”
On , Mira Murati, Former Chief Technology Officer at OpenAI, spoke about human-AI collaboration during Thinking Machines’ Murati on AI’s Next Chapter on Bloomberg Live.
Mira Murati, co-founder and CEO of Thinking Machines Lab, discussed the company's focus on human-AI collaboration during an appearance at Bloomberg Tech 2026 in San Francisco on June 3, 2026. Murati described the company's "interaction models," which she said are a new kind of model designed to keep humans in the loop, as opposed to the turn-based model in which an AI cannot perceive new information while thinking. She stated that the company has been working on the foundations of building a frontier AI model for the past year and a half and described the interaction models as a first look at a "concentrated bet towards human AI collaboration." Murati said she expects the company to show increased capabilities on the model side and more products in this direction in the coming months. Murati emphasized the importance of institutional design, decision-making, and transparency in AI governance, stating that the conversation too often gets wrapped up in the character of individual leaders. She said she has "very high conviction" that the way to continue building frontier AI systems is to keep humans in the loop, likening the process to a "tandem bike" rather than an autonomous system advancing without human involvement. Regarding competition and the company's funding, Murati said Thinking Machines raised significant capital but called the fundraising itself "not any big accomplishment" and said "it's really what you do with that" that matters, noting the company is "not a normal company" and requires substantial capital to build frontier AI systems.