Ai2 CEO Ali Farhadi named to βAI Power List,β with a nod to instituteβs open-source focus

Business Insiderβs latest list of the most influential people in artificial intelligence is a whoβs who of key players shaping what the publication calls the βnext wave of AI innovation.β A notable Seattle name made the cut.
Ali Farhadi, CEO of Seattleβs Allen Institute for AI (Ai2), is among 25 key players identified by BI who are stepping up to the challenges brought about by the modern AI arms race. They are βbuilding the most powerful AI systems at the fastest rate possibleβ while also considering βpublic safety, trust, and environmental impacts,β BI reported.
The list includes people across sectors, from big tech to startups to venture capital and journalism, and includes heavy hitters such as OpenAI co-founder and CEO Sam Altman, Nvidia co-founder and CEO Jensen Huang, Amazon Web Services Agentic AI VP Swami Sivasubramanian, and Anthropic co-founder and CEO Daniela Amodei.
Peggy Johnson, the former Microsoft exec who leads Salem, Ore.-based Agility Robotics, also made the list.
Farhadi is a longtime Seattle tech leader and computer vision specialist who founded and led Ai2 spinout Xnor.ai as CEO. HeΒ sold the AI startup to Apple in 2020Β in an estimated $200 million deal that represents one of the instituteβs biggest commercial successes to date.
A professor in the University of Washingtonβs Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, Farhadi returned to Ai2Β as its CEO in July 2023.
In naming Farhardi to its Power List, Business Insider noted how he and Ai2 βmake AI research open and accessible to the public,β adding that βfrom climate modeling to healthcare, Farhadiβs work influences how institutions scale AI for the benefit of humanity.β
In an appearance on the GeekWire Podcast last year, Farhadi discussed what it takes to train AI models, and the importance of open-source AI.
βIf the U.S. wants to maintain its edge β¦ we have only one way, and that is to promote open approaches, promote open-source solutions,β Farhadi said at the time. βBecause no matter how many dollars youβre investing in an ecosystem, without communal, global efforts, youβre not going to be as fast.β
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