Fox News Anchor Bret Baier explores how technology is changing how the world works with a “special report.”
Artificial intelligence is rapidly developing. Some accept it, while others warn of potential threats. But both sides agree, and technology is changing the way the world works.
“We're just two and a half years across the entire AI Boom, the first commercially available product to be launched at the end of November 2022,” said White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks.
The following year, the visual use of AI will increase. Large text-based language models are shifting towards video, audio and imaging.
“There are paper books, there are e-books. It doesn't mean that I'm using e-books only. I have a lot of paper books,” said Margarita Gurvina, Vice President of Business Growth for Responders at the Audio Clinical Special Effects Company. “And we have different viewers for content generated by AI and for content that has traditionally been filmed.”
Most small and medium-sized businesses use artificial intelligence

File-Dayret Alaniz is working on the thermostatic circuit boards in Houston on April 4, 2024 with Goodwill Job Connection's Clean Tech Accelerator program. (Melissa Phillip/Getty Images of the Houston Chronicle/Getty Images)
According to Fox News Polling, only 11% of registered voters say they use AI every day. But many people are already using technology without making it happen.
“We say for AI, we can all be artists. For AI, we can all be programmers. For AI, we can all be great writers. That's for everyone's bar.
The algorithms built into social media platforms curate the content displayed. The car navigation app is programmed to analyze traffic in real time and to learn routines and adjust temperatures if you have a smart thermostat at home.
“All the analysis we've done is that demand is real,” said Joseph Dominguez, president and CEO of Constellation. “In the long run, if this continues to grow, there's no choice but to increase our capabilities, whether it's a nuclear or a new technology that does the same thing,” says the other way around, if it's just a growing number of us.
Openai CEO Sam Altman testifies before the Senate Committee on AI: “It's good.”

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of Nvidia, will be speaking on stage at the forum in Washington, DC on July 23, 2025. (Hill & Valley Forum / Loiloklin from Getty Images / Getty Images)
Energy producers, Hollywood and businesses are all finding new ways to use AI.
“I use four different AIs every day,” Huang said. “I'll use them to get a second opinion, or I'll do the research for me by asking all three of them the same prompts and the same questions.
There is concern that AI is reliant on the Internet. While that seems like an infinite amount of information, some studies suggest that publicly available information used to improve the platform could be exhausted by 2032.
“The consideration here is that the Internet is getting bigger, but it is being created by more and more AI in new data placed on the Internet. This is not very useful for training new AI as a general rule. So if the Internet is 100 times the size now, it will be an advantage for AI researchers. Centers at Strategy and International Research Centers.
Small business AI adoption jumps to 68% as owners plan significant workforce growth in 2025
| Ticker | safety | last | change | change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NVDA | Nvidia Corp. | 179.81 | +1.82 |
+1.02% |
In the fear that AI could generate job losses in a variety of industries, others have pointed out that AI cannot move forward so quickly without humans.
“It's developing rapidly, but at the same time, we learn what people produce,” Grubina said. “They're all trained on what people produce, so if we stop producing, I think they'll stop developing, right?”
However, technology experts who developed the AI platform have expressed concern that the technology could become too powerful. In March 2023, dozens of high-tech CEOs, including Elon Musk, called for a six-month hiatus in AI development over concerns that technology could “pose deep risks to society and humanity.”
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Elon Musk, along with dozens of other high-tech CEOs, has expressed concerns about AI technology. (Richard Bode / Wire Image / Getty Images)
“I basically believe that almost everything is necessary, at least for the most important thing,” Microsoft President Brad Smith said. “I think the key is that we have to use AI to think smarter and rely on it to help us think for us. Don't be intellectually lazy.”
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said in February's “The Tonight Show” that most things may not require humans. Musk also calls AI the best or worst thing to happen to humanity. Apple CEO Tim Cook calls AI one of the deepest technologies of our lifetime. Despite some of the major changes that could be ahead, many who work closely with this technology are seeing future benefits.
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“AI is a very powerful technology and can definitely do huge amounts. It can also be used in harmful ways. The first thing you notice is that AI is surrounded by other AIs that keep it safe, keep it safe, keep it safe, keep it safe, keep it safe, keep it safe,” Huang said.
