Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak joins ‘The Claman Countdown’ to reflect on Apple’s 50th anniversary, discuss the rise of AI and warn about the growing power of Big Tech.
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak is raising concerns about artificial intelligence as the technology becomes more embedded in everyday life, warning that it may not yet deliver the reliability and human understanding people expect.
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Wozniak, who helped build Apple’s first computers and shape the personal computing revolution, based his skepticism around the importance of human thought and emotional awareness, arguing that technology should reflect real understanding rather than just well-written answers.
“I want to know that a human being thinks like me, knows what I might feel, and understands emotions and all that,” Wozniak said.
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Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak speaks at a conference. (Luis Ortiz/Latin Content / Getty Images)
Based on his own experience testing AI tools, Wozniak said the systems often fail to answer questions directly, instead providing broad or unrelated information that misses the user’s real need.
“I want reliable content like this every time. I’m not a fan of AI,” Wozniak said.
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His comments also touched on the broader impact of technology on human behavior, suggesting that the growing reliance on automated systems could change the way people process information and solve problems.
“It makes you dependent,” Wozniak said.


