Close Menu
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Trending
Vibe Coding With Replit Was Fun and Cheap — but There Were Limitations

Vibe Coding With Replit Was Fun and Cheap — but There Were Limitations

June 13, 2025
How Issuers Define Travel: What Is Considered A Travel Purchase?

How Issuers Define Travel: What Is Considered A Travel Purchase?

June 13, 2025
Best and Worst Jewelry to Wear This Summer, From Jewelers and Stylists

Best and Worst Jewelry to Wear This Summer, From Jewelers and Stylists

June 13, 2025
Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

June 13, 2025
Worried About Future Social Security Cuts? 5 Changes To Make To Your Retirement Plan Now

Worried About Future Social Security Cuts? 5 Changes To Make To Your Retirement Plan Now

June 13, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
June 13, 2025 9:36 pm EDT
|
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  Market Data
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Commodities & Futures
    • ETFs & Mutual Funds
    • Funds
    • Currencies
    • Crypto
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Personal Finance
    • Loans
    • Credit Cards
    • Dept Management
    • Retirement
    • Mortgages
    • Saving
    • Taxes
  • Fintech
Fin Street NewsFin Street News
Home » Here’s how far we are from AGI, according to the people developing it
Here’s how far we are from AGI, according to the people developing it
Markets

Here’s how far we are from AGI, according to the people developing it

News RoomBy News RoomApril 20, 20250 ViewsNo Comments
Companies are teaching their workers how to use AI.

baona / Getty Images

  • AGI, or artificial general intelligence, is a still-theoretical AI that can reason like humans.
  • Top researchers agree the leap to AGI is close but differ on just how close.
  • Some say we’ll see AGI in as little as two years. Others say we’re still decades away.

One of the oft-stated goals of the current AI arms race is to reach artificial general intelligence, or AGI.

AGI is a still-hypothetical form of machine intelligence that can solve human tasks through methods that aren’t constrained to its training.

The question of when we’ll reach it is debated among many of the top names in the field. Here’s a closer look at how far we are from AGI, according to the people closest to it.

Demis Hassabis
Demis Hassabis speaking.
Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis.

Google

AGI will arrive “in the next five to ten years,” Demis Hassabis — the CEO of Google DeepMind and a recently minted Nobel laureate — said on the April 20 episode of 60 Minutes. By 2030, “we’ll have a system that really understands everything around you in very nuanced and deep ways and kind of embedded in your everyday life,” he added.

The show’s host, Scott Pelley, then posed the question: Has an AI engine ever asked a question that was unanticipated? To which Hassabis responded, “Not so far that I’ve experienced. I think that’s getting at the idea of what’s still missing from these systems. They still can’t really yet go beyond asking a new, novel question. Or a new, novel conjecture. Or coming up with a new hypothesis that has not been thought of before.”

AI systems don’t yet have curiosity, and they are lacking in imagination and intuition, he said: “In the next maybe five to ten years, I think we’ll have systems that are capable of not only solving a important problem or conjecture in science, but coming up with it in the first place.”

Sam Altman
Sam Altman presenting on stage
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty Images

The CEO of OpenAI believes that we’re already making major progress toward AGI. On the Y Combinator podcast, he said one of the things he’s most excited about in 2025 is the arrival of AGI.

Miles Brundage
Phone with the OpenAI logo

SOPA Images/Getty Images

OpenAI’s former head of AGI readiness believes we’ll see some form of AGI manifest in the next few years. Brundage, who left OpenAI in August, said that in the next few years, the AI industry will develop “systems that can basically do anything a person can do remotely on a computer.” That includes operating the mouse and keyboard or even looking like a “human in a video chat.”

Dario Amodei
Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic, sits in front of a tan background.
Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic.

Anthropic

Dario Amodei, CEO of OpenAI’s competitor Anthropic, believes we will see some form of AGI by 2026. In an essay he posted to the company’s website in October, he described AGI, which he prefers to call “powerful AI,” as smarter than a Nobel Prize winner across many fields, multimodal, independent, fast, replicable, cooperative, and free of a physical embodiment. In short, he believes it’ll be akin to “a country of geniuses in a data center.”

Geoffrey Hinton
Geoffrey Hinton
AI godfather Geoffrey Hinton.

YouTube Screenshot

AI godfather Geoffrey Hinton believes that we might see AI that’s smarter than humans in as little as five years.

In a post on X last year, he wrote, “I now predict 5 to 20 years but without much confidence. We live in very uncertain times.”

Andrew Ng
Andrew Ng
AI researcher Andrew Ng.

Steve Jennings / Stringer/Getty Images

Leading AI researcher Andrew Ng is a little more conservative in his estimates about AGI. He’s described it as a form of intelligence that can do “any intellectual tasks that a human can,” whether that’s driving a car, flying a plane, or writing a Ph.D. thesis.

And he’s not convinced we’ll get there soon. “I hope we get there in our lifetime, but I’m not sure,” he said, adding that people should be skeptical of companies that claim AGI is imminent.

Richard Socher
richard socher Salesforce
Richard Socher, CEO of AI-powered search engine, you.com.

Salesforce

Richard Socher, a former Salesforce executive who is now the CEO of AI-powered search engine You.com, says there are two ways to define AGI. “There’s a simple economic one, which is 80% of the jobs will be automated with AI, and then we can call it AGI,” he previously told Business Insider. He predicted we’ll get there in three to five years.

When you expand the definition of AGI to a form of intelligence that can “learn like humans” and “visually have the same motor intelligence, and visual intelligence, language intelligence, and logical intelligence as some of the most logical people,” then the timeline could range from as little as 10 years to as much as 200 years, he said.

Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun, chief AI scientist
Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief AI scientist.

Meta Platforms

Meta’s chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, doesn’t believe we’ll see AGI anytime soon.

At the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos in January, LeCun said AGI “is not around the corner” and it “will take years, if not decades” before it comes to fruition.

And LeCun says we shouldn’t expect it to arrive as a single event.

On an episode of Lex Fridman’s podcast in March, he said, “The idea somehow which, you know, is popularized by science fiction and Hollywood that, you know, somehow somebody is going to discover the secret, the secret to AGI, or human-level AI, or AMI, whatever you want to call it. And then, you know, turn on a machine, and then we have AGI. That’s just not going to happen. It’s not going to be an event. It’s going to be gradual progress.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Vibe Coding With Replit Was Fun and Cheap — but There Were Limitations

Vibe Coding With Replit Was Fun and Cheap — but There Were Limitations

Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner’s Relationship Timeline, From Dating to Engagement

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner’s Relationship Timeline, From Dating to Engagement

Marines Deploy Inside LA to Protect a Federal Building From Protests

Marines Deploy Inside LA to Protect a Federal Building From Protests

Why Did Israel Unleash Hundreds of Warplanes Against Iran?

Why Did Israel Unleash Hundreds of Warplanes Against Iran?

Read Steve Jobs’ Notes on His Stanford Speech, Parenting

Read Steve Jobs’ Notes on His Stanford Speech, Parenting

Danny Boyle on His Movies, ’28 Years Later,’ and Cillian Murphy’s Return

Danny Boyle on His Movies, ’28 Years Later,’ and Cillian Murphy’s Return

Oil and gold prices jump as stocks fall after Israel attacks Iran

Oil and gold prices jump as stocks fall after Israel attacks Iran

Good Things That Happened on Friday 13th

Good Things That Happened on Friday 13th

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

How Issuers Define Travel: What Is Considered A Travel Purchase?

How Issuers Define Travel: What Is Considered A Travel Purchase?

June 13, 2025
Best and Worst Jewelry to Wear This Summer, From Jewelers and Stylists

Best and Worst Jewelry to Wear This Summer, From Jewelers and Stylists

June 13, 2025
Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

Why You Shouldn’t Book a Shared Room on an Overnight Train

June 13, 2025
Worried About Future Social Security Cuts? 5 Changes To Make To Your Retirement Plan Now

Worried About Future Social Security Cuts? 5 Changes To Make To Your Retirement Plan Now

June 13, 2025
Kate Middleton’s Fashion Evolution – Business Insider

Kate Middleton’s Fashion Evolution – Business Insider

June 13, 2025

Latest News

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner’s Relationship Timeline, From Dating to Engagement

Dua Lipa and Callum Turner’s Relationship Timeline, From Dating to Engagement

June 13, 2025
Tesla Announces U.S. Price Hikes on Model S and X Electric Vehicles

Tesla Announces U.S. Price Hikes on Model S and X Electric Vehicles

June 13, 2025
Not All College-Bound Seniors Are Filling Out The FAFSA. That’s A Problem

Not All College-Bound Seniors Are Filling Out The FAFSA. That’s A Problem

June 13, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest finance and business news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2025 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.