Sam Altman has a confession: he's jealous of today's college dropouts. The OpenAI CEO, speaking at the DevDay conference, admitted he's "envious of the current generation of 20-year-old dropouts" and their seemingly limitless opportunities to build and create.
This is coming from someone who knows the dropout life well. Altman himself left Stanford University to pursue entrepreneurship, and it obviously worked out. But even with his success running one of the most influential AI companies on the planet, he says something's missing. He misses the freedom to just sit around and dream up new startup ideas. Running OpenAI, which he co-founded with Elon Musk, takes up pretty much all his mental real estate these days.
His comments land at an interesting moment. The tech industry is having a serious reckoning about whether college is actually worth it. A recent LinkedIn Workforce Confidence survey found that only 41% of junior U.S. professionals think a college degree is necessary for career success anymore. That's less than half.
Altman isn't alone in his thinking. He joins an impressive roster of successful tech leaders who ditched college, including Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs, Jack Dorsey, and Mark Zuckerberg. Zuckerberg himself recently chimed in with similar thoughts, suggesting that not everyone needs college since plenty of jobs don't actually require it.
What we're seeing is a broader shift among Gen Z entrepreneurs who are increasingly choosing to skip the traditional education route entirely and jump straight into building their own companies. It's part of a larger conversation in tech about whether formal degrees matter as much as actual skills and hands-on experience.
If this trend continues and more industry leaders keep questioning the college-degree-as-prerequisite model, it could reshape how tech companies think about hiring and training. We might be heading toward a future where what you can do matters more than where you studied.




