Dominick Reuter

The AI tech my dad helped pioneer is now the foundation for the tools I build at AT&T

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Natalie Gilbert, a 30-year-old data scientist at AT&T whose father, Mazin Gilbert, was a researcher at the company’s Bell Labs division. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Growing up, I was super naive about what AT&T was.

What I knew about the company came through the lens of my dad, who was working on speech recognition. He worked with people like Yann LeCun, who was developing the capability to detect handwriting and convert it to text, and Dennis Ritchie, who created the C programming language.

My dad’s work with speech recognition and synthesis was the foundation for what I do today with generative AI. Everything I’ve built here has the same foundation he was working on: convolutional neural networks, which enable computers to process inputs like images and sound. It’s really cool to see how that foundation has evolved.


Natalie and Mazin Gilbert

Natalie Gilbert and her father, Mazin Gilbert. 

AT&T



Their early discoveries have enabled us to work with AI agents and make them more autonomous.

As a child, I was pretty much in my dad’s office almost every day after school, and I remember watching him and his colleagues have heated discussions and draw crazy diagrams on the whiteboard.

That inspired me to start drawing my own decision trees and whatnot that were super nonsensical, but the experience taught me how to be creative and analytical.

One side project my dad and I worked on together was called Dr Bot, which was an early iteration of a large language model that could assess your symptoms and tell you where to seek care.

From whiteboarding to coding and back

What I do with AI agents really boils down to a bunch of decision trees that reason through how to get from point A to point B. It was something that I learned very early on with my dad.

There’s a lot of human interaction that’s increasingly important in the building of AI technologies.

In AT&T’s Chief Data Office, we’re working on a project that’s transforming how people think about using HR technology within the company. We’re basically eliminating the question of where to go to solve an HR problem by having an AI agent identify the relevant policy or procedure for a person’s situation. That’s no small matter in an organization as large and complicated as AT&T.


Natalie Gilbert (L) with a colleague.

Natalie Gilbert with a colleague at AT&T. 

AT&T



In my own work, I do use a coding copilot, or digital assistant, that helps me work a lot faster, but people who are developing AI tools still need to understand the technologies that underlie LLMs and machine learning models.

New AI tools are amazingly powerful, but they can’t do everything

As these copilots get more popular, people can run into trouble if they don’t understand how those technologies fundamentally work.

For example, if you don’t know how the code is actually handling an edge-case scenario, then your AI tools aren’t going to be any good.

At the same time, it feels like people need to learn something new every two months.

What I see changing with large language models is that they are much more natural-language-focused rather than coded. That means I actually spend most of my time doing prompt engineering, which isn’t coding at all; it’s using natural language to get machines to understand us.

It’s sort of ironic, because this is another form of what my dad did 30 years ago.

AI has changed so drastically in my lifetime, and now I feel like I’m representing him and representing his legacy. Continuing the work that he did feels surreal.




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AT&T CEO says he made a mistake in how he went about fixing company culture — but the viral memo wasn’t it

CEO John Stankey said he made some missteps in addressing company culture at AT&T — and shed some new light on his internal memo that went viral.

The lengthy memo, which was first reported by Business Insider in August, described how the company was moving to a “more market-based culture,” setting off discourse about the state of workplace loyalty.

Stankey gave some insight into the goal behind the memo during a conversation at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council Summit on Tuesday.

When asked to name a mistake he’s made, Stankey said he was too slow to tackle the “culture evolution” that was needed. He said he put it among several areas of focus for the company and that instead he should’ve put it at the forefront and forced specific actions to make it happen.

Alan Murray, president of the WSJ Leadership Institute, suggested that was why Stanley sent that memo this year, rather than sooner.

“The memo shouldn’t be over-rotated on. It’s one of a series of steps in trying to put a framework out there and remove excuses for leaders to lead,” Stankey said, adding the memo gave context on the framework he was building for the business.

“That memo outlined my point of view on it, and it gives leaders that want to lead all the air cover in the world they need to go and execute around that framework,” he said.

AT&T has undergone a number of changes as a company in the past year, including a return-to-office mandate of five days a week.

In the memo to employees, Stankey effectively said they should get on board with changes to the company culture, or get out.

“We run a dynamic, customer-facing business, tackling large-scale, challenging initiatives,” Stankey said in the memo. “If the requirements dictated by this dynamic do not align to your personal desires, you have every right to find a career opportunity that is suitable to your aspirations and needs.”

At the event on Tuesday, Stankey also outlined how AT&T is pushing employees to adopt AI. He said the company has tutorials and other educational tools for employees to upskill with AI, and that he’s paying attention to who is using them.

“I want to see who’s building their skill set, where they’re building, and this is just the next set of skills that people are going to have to have,” he said.




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