Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "General Intelligence"


25 mentions found


Professor Yoshua Bengio, at the One Young World Summit in Montreal, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 20, 2024Famed computer scientist Yoshua Bengio — an artificial intelligence pioneer — has warned of the nascent technology's potential negative effects on society and called for more research to mitigate its risks. Machines could soon have most of the cognitive abilities of humans, he said — artificial general intelligence (AGI) is a type of AI technology that aims to equal or better human intellect. Yoshua Bengio Head of the Montreal Institute for Learning AlgorithmsSuch outcomes are possible within decades, he said. There are arguments to suggest that the way AI machines are currently being trained "would lead to systems that turn against humans," Bengio said. Yoshua Bengio Head of the Montreal Institute for Learning AlgorithmsCompanies developing AI must also be liable for their actions, according to the computer scientist.
Persons: Yoshua Bengio, , Bengio, CNBC's Tania Bryer, That's, we're, OpenAIhas, It’s, Yoshua, — that's, OpenAI Organizations: Young, Summit, University of Montreal, Montreal Institute, Machines, Intelligence, CNBC, Learning Locations: Montreal, Canada, AGI, U.S, Rwanda, Swiss
AdvertisementA bipartisan US congressional commission urges a "Manhattan Project" for AI to outpace China. Trump has previously called China the "primary threat" in the AI race. AdvertisementThe Manhattan Project was a secret program led by the US government during World War II to develop the world's first atomic bombs. Advertisement"We have to take the lead over China, China is the primary threat," he added. OpenAI also cited the Manhattan Project in its blueprint as one of the US's "iconic infrastructure projects that moved the country forward."
Persons: Trump, Donald Trump, Logan, Joe Biden's, OpenAI, Yoshua, Max Tegmark Organizations: China, China Economic, Security, Commission, General Intelligence, US Treasury Department, Business, Manhattan Project, Life Institute, MIT, Guardian, Elon Locations: China, US, Washington
AdvertisementCustomer-friction concerns, partnership hiccups, compatibility questions, latency problems, and accuracy issues have snarled progress, according to internal Amazon documents and multiple people involved in the project. AdvertisementA product of this scale is "unprecedented, and takes time," an Amazon spokesperson told Business Insider. Related storiesFor example, without more clearly defined responsibilities with third-party partners, Amazon expected further delays in the launch. AdvertisementLatency has been a particularly tough problem for the AI Alexa service. Related storiesNew risksIn late August, Amazon discovered several new risk factors for the AI Alexa service.
Persons: Alexa, that's, Amazon, Taylor Swift, they're, ChatGPT, Andy Jassy, Andy Jassy Mike Blake, Claude Haiku, Rohit Prasad, Claude, AGI NurPhoto, , Fortune, Amazon's Organizations: Uber, Ticketmaster, Alexa, Echo, Amazon, Business, Bloomberg, TV, Reuters, General Intelligence, AGI, Companies
The big storyA Copilot conundrumMicrosoft; Chelsea Jia Feng/BIMicrosoft's challenges with its flagship AI product could be another red flag for an industry with high hopes for the tech. Earlier this year, analysts at Barclays highlighted an under-the-radar risk to AI bets: the depreciation costs related to AI chips . A potential Trump trade plan beneficiary: US semiconductor jobs. If Trump's proposed trade plan is enacted, the American semiconductor industry could see hiring growth. Walmart might be just fine under Trump's proposed trade plan.
Persons: Copilot, Chelsea Jia Feng, Insider's Ashley Stewart, Satya Nadella didn't, doesn't, Ashley, It's, Sam Altman, Alistair Barr, Alyssa Powell, Jared Spataro, OpenAI, Biden, Carlyle, Will Matt Gaetz, Will Trump, Rob Arnott, Arnott, ANGELA WEISS, Trump's, Ilya Sutskever, Mira Murati, Rebecca Zisser, homebuyers, Trump, Bob Iger, Dan DeFrancesco, Grace Lett, Ella Hopkins, Hallam Bullock, Amanda Yen, New York.Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Microsoft, Chelsea, Getty, Lumen Technologies, Barclays, Trump, Treasury, UFC, Republican, Getty Images, Elon, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue, Walmart, Walmart US, Shoppers, The Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Rio de Janeiro, New York, Chicago, London, New York.Milan
The generative AI boom has inspired bold AGI predictions ranging from this happening in 2025, 2026, or maybe 2027. AdvertisementThat's the main reason for huge gains in recent years in the performance of AI models. AdvertisementHorowitz noted several factors that are holding back AI model improvements, including a lack of new high-quality human data and problems sourcing the extra energy needed to power AI data centers. AGI questionsIf the main tried-and-true method for improving AI models is no longer working, we are unlikely to get AGI anytime soon. Altman's bold AGI predictions may also be an effective rallying cry for hard-working OpenAI employees.
Persons: Sam Altman, there's, that's, Oren Etzioni, Etzioni, Ilya Sutskever, Noam Brown, Google hasn't, Marc, Ben, Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, Andreessen, Horowitz, we're, OpenAI, Altman, we've, AGI, Elon Musk, It's Organizations: YouTube, Allen Institute, Tech, Reuters, Orion, Bloomberg, Google, AGI, Microsoft, Intel, Computer, Artificial Intelligence Locations: Seattle
Elon MuskTesla Optimus robot prototypes walk onto a stage. Screengrab from We, Robot livestreamElon Musk has been working on the Optimus humanoid robot for years. At Tesla's Robotaxi event last month, the robots poured drinks and played rock-paper-scissors with guests (though they were remotely controlled by humans). Outside Tesla, Musk personally invested in Vicarious when it was an AI startup working on general intelligence for robots. Vicarious has since been acquired by Intrinsic, an AI robotics company at Google's parent company, Alphabet.
Persons: Elon, Robot livestream Elon Musk, Musk, Tesla
OpenAI chief Sam Altman urged would-be founders to bet on AI. Despite their current feud, Altman said he was "very grateful" for Elon Musk's early backing. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementAnd despite their contentious relationship today, Altman said he was "very grateful" to Elon Musk for helping to fund OpenAI in its early days. OpenAI hit back last month, saying Musk was harassing the company for "his own competitive advantage" in the name of his rival firm, xAI.
Persons: Sam Altman, Altman, Elon Musk's, , Y, Garry Tan, you've, Elon Musk, Musk, OpenAI, it's Organizations: Service, Business
Physical Intelligence, a robot startup based in San Francisco, has raised $400 million at a $2.4 billion post-money valuation, the company confirmed Monday to CNBC. Investors included Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, OpenAI, Thrive Capital and Lux Capital, a Physical Intelligence spokesperson said. Physical Intelligence's new valuation is about six times that of its March seed round, which reportedly came in at $70 million with a $400 million valuation. Physical Intelligence hopes that model will be the first step toward its ultimate goal of developing artificial general intelligence. In case studies, Physical Intelligence details how its tech could allow a robot to do laundry, bus tables or assemble a box.
Persons: Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, OpenAI, Microsoft's Bing Organizations: Economic, Amazon, Change, Physical Intelligence, CNBC, Investors, Lux Capital, Khosla Ventures, Sequoia Capital, Tesla, Google, Intelligence Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain, San Francisco, ChatGPT
Brundage was a key figure in AGI research at OpenAI. He was also responsible for some of OpenAI's biggest safety research innovations, including external red teaming, which involves bringing outside experts to look for potential problems in the company's products. AdvertisementBrundage said his departure, at least, was not motivated by specific safety concerns. "I'm pretty confident that there's no other lab that is totally on top of things," he told Hard Fork. He told Hard Fork that he still stands by the decision and elaborated on why he left.
Persons: Miles Brundage, OpenAI, Brundage, , we're, John Schulman, AGI, Dario Amodei, Anthropic Organizations: Service, AGI
Citi reiterates Amazon as buy Citi said the e-commerce giant has "multiple catalysts for growth" following earnings on Thursday. Gordon Haskett upgrades Uber to buy from hold The firm said investors should buy the dip in Uber following earnings on Thursday. Goldman Sachs initiates Penguin Solutions as buy Goldman called Penguin a "high performance hardware solutions for enterprise AI at an attractive valuation." Wells Fargo downgrades Estee Lauder to equal weight from overweight Wells downgraded the stock following a disappointing earnings report on Thursday. KeyBanc upgrades Atlassian to overweight from sector weight KeyBanc upgraded the software company following earnings.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Gordon Haskett, Goldman, Wells, Estee Lauder, it'll, Atlassian, Kinder Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Arista, Datadog, it's, CFRA, Berkshire Hathaway, Jefferies Organizations: Apple, Apple Intelligence, Citi, Amazon, Penguin Solutions, Penguin, Suncor Energy, " Bank of America, Nvidia, Artificial, TAM, Bank of America, UBS, Intel, Mizuho, IDA, Energy Locations: Asia
AdvertisementJames Cameron, the writer and director of "The Terminator," is wary of artificial general intelligence, the still theoretical version of AI that can reason as well as humans. Related storiesCameron said that while he's "bullish on AI," he's "not so keen on AGI because AGI will just be a mirror of us." "Since there is no shortage of evil in the human world, and certainly no agreement of even what good is, what could possibly go wrong?" The Future with Bill Gates," Cameron told the Microsoft cofounder that it's getting harder to write science fiction as AI progresses. Cameron also told Gates he's concerned people are putting more faith in machines and less into their sense of purpose.
Persons: James Cameron, , Cameron, AGI, Arnold Schwarzenegger, he's, Joe Maher, Bill Gates, Gates, Gates he's Organizations: Service, US Defense Department, Robotics, Getty, Netflix, Microsoft
Since its founding in 2010, DeepMind has focused on building AI that might solve some of the world's stickiest problems, as varied as the climate crisis and protein folding. Last year, Google, which acquired DeepMind in 2014, folded the group in with the unit responsible for creating the transformers AI model breakthrough, forming what DeepMind's chief operating officer, Ibrahim, describes as "the engine room of Google in the AI era." As head of operations, Ibrahim is not only helping guide Google DeepMind's pursuit of artificial general intelligence, but she's also led several internal initiatives to use DeepMind's research for consumer applications, including several partnerships to bring AI education to schools. But DeepMind's foundational research remains a key focus of investment for Ibrahim and the company. See Business Insider's full AI Power List
Persons: DeepMind, Ibrahim, she's Organizations: Google
Tony Kim, head of the fundamental equities technology group at BlackRock , is helming a new AI-focused fund launching on Tuesday. The top holdings in the ETF at launch are some of biggest names in the AI trade, including Nvidia and Microsoft . The AI Trade The excitement around the AI trade may have recently lost some of its luster for short-term traders. The valuations of some of the trendy AI stocks have also been a worry for some investors since AI took off with the introduction of ChatGPT in late 2022 . BlackRock is launching a similar fund in an ETF wrapper on Tuesday, the iShares Technology Opportunities Active ETF (TEK), with Kim as one of the managers.
Persons: Tony Kim, Kim, What's, , TEK Organizations: BlackRock, Innovation, Tech, ETF, Nvidia, Microsoft, Astera Labs, Hitachi, Nasdaq, Apple, BlackRock Technology, Fund, BAI Locations: BlackRock
Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis says "AI agents" are the next phase of AI after chatbots. According to Demis Hassabis, the CEO of Google DeepMind and a recently minted Nobel laureate, there isn't any secret formula to get there. Hassabis pointed to AlphaGo, DeepMind's AI that first defeated humans in Go, demonstrating reasoning skills in the game's defined domain. Hassabis pointed to AlphaGo, DeepMind's AI that first defeated humans in Go, demonstrating reasoning skills in the game's defined domain. They can use hardware like robots in the physical world, software like a calculator, or even other AI systems.
Persons: Demis Hassabis, , Hassabis, they've Organizations: Google, Service, The Times Tech
Earlier this year, Sam Altman discussed the future of artificial general intelligence at Harvard. Altman said he envisions AGI as a tool to enhance productivity and create shared intelligence. OpenAI's mission is to develop AGI, a form of intelligence that mimics human reasoning. AdvertisementSam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, is always in the media spotlight, fielding many questions. It showed him one part of "what the post-AGI world can look like," Altman said on the Life in Seven Songs podcast.
Persons: Sam Altman, Altman, , Patrick Chung, OpenAI, AGI, — Altman, we're, it'll, Rob Price Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard Business School
There is an impending wave of new startups spinning out of larger AI labs, per Air Street Capital's State of AI report. AI labs are fragmenting due to ego clashes, philosophical disagreements, and commercial pressures. But as AI labs work towards the sector's holy grail, known as artificial general intelligence, those personalities have clashed — sometimes leading to a very public parting of ways. They are just some of the examples in a long line of AI labs that have fractured away from their juggernaut predecessors to form new startups. The exception would be if AI labs pivot toward building a niche model within a specific vertical, he said.
Persons: , Ilya Sutskever, Andreessen Horowitz, StabilityAI's, H's cofounders, Sam Altman, Noel Hurley, they're, Nathan Benaich, Samir Kumar, Kumar, Peter J, Liu, Hurley, Benaich Organizations: Service, Sequoia, Black, Labs, TechCrunch, Accel, UiPath, NEA, Founders, Air Street Capital, Literal Labs, Touring Capital, Meta, Google Locations: Capital's, Paris, Sutskever
But strategy advisors say it'll need to get more serious about defining its public benefit. Unlike traditional for-profit businesses, which are primarily focused on maximizing shareholder value, public benefit corporations must balance stakeholder interests with those of their employees and customers. Investors can also question why a company isn't progressing on its stated public benefit. It will also need to define its "public benefit" as part of its new corporate charter, he added. So as OpenAI restructures, the pressure is now on the company to clearly articulate its public mission and show that it's serious about it.
Persons: , OpenAI, Axios, Travis Borden, Keene, OpenAI's, Borden, Altman, Ilya Sutskever, Jan Leike, Mira Murati, restructures, Jens Dammann Organizations: Service, Legal, Institute, Cornell Law School, Keene Advisors, University of Texas School of Law, Business Locations: Silicon, Delaware,
OpenAI is projected to turn a profit in 2029, a new report from The Information says. Microsoft also appears to be on track to get a 20% cut of OpenAI's revenue, per the report. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The report said the company doesn't expect to become profitable until 2029 when revenue is projected to hit $100 billion. According to The Information, OpenAI is currently projecting that its compute costs for model training could hit as high as $9.5 billion a year in 2026.
Persons: , OpenAI, it's, Kate Leaman, Leaman Organizations: Microsoft, Service, Business Locations: Silicon Valley
OpenAI has fired back at Elon Musk's latest lawsuit. Musk's lawyers have argued that OpenAI executives "deceived" him into cofounding the company. AdvertisementIn response to Musk's lawsuit, OpenAI called it the latest move in Musk's "increasingly blusterous campaign to harass OpenAI for his own competitive advantage." "OpenAI is dedicated to the safe and beneficial development of artificial general intelligence ("AGI")," OpenAI's lawyers said in a court filing on Tuesday. A long-running feudIn March, Musk first sued OpenAI on similar grounds but later dropped the suit in June.
Persons: OpenAI, , Musk, Tesla, Sam Altman, He's, xAI, Ilya Sutskever's, Mira Muta, Ilya Sutskever Organizations: Elon, Service, Musk, Business, Microsoft Locations: Musk's
The boom in corporate investment into artificial intelligence infrastructure still has some way to go as large language models are continuing to evolve, according to the CEO of Foxconn , a key supplier to Apple . This type of AI is referred to in the industry as "AGI," or Artificial General Intelligence. Liu said that progress toward increasingly intelligent AI can only be a good thing for the AI server industry, which has been a key boon to Foxconn's growth this year. "I think for the AI server industry, I think we still have some time to grow," Liu added. "With the AGI capability growing, the age [of] AI devices will be another industry we should watch carefully."
Persons: Emily Tan, Foxconn Young Liu, Liu, OpenAI, Sam Altman, he's Organizations: Apple, Intelligence, CNBC, Microsoft
There's an important stipulation on OpenAI's historic $6.6 billion funding round. AdvertisementOpenAI's historically large $6.6 billion funding round is bringing in checks from some of the biggest technology and venture capital investors. If the ChatGPT-maker doesn't complete its transition to a for-profit company within two years, investors in the latest round could ask for their money back, multiple outlets have said. But "if there's disagreement within the entity, then it's much harder for the regulators to approve it," he said. AdvertisementStill, the legal experts said that though OpenAI's transition to a for-profit company is a complicated one, it's doable.
Persons: , there's, doesn't, OpenAI, Jill Horwitz, Horwitz, Alexander Reid, Reid, doable, Elon Musk, Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Musk, Altman Organizations: Service, University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, Internal, SEC, IRS, Employees Locations: OpenAI, Delaware, California
One thing seems clear: The company is burning through far more cash than it’s bringing in, according to reporting from the New York Times. (That’s revenue largely from subscriptions to premium versions of ChatGPT and licensing its tech to third-party developers.) Here’s where things get a little wild:Next year, OpenAI estimates that its revenue will more than triple to $11.6 billion. It’s not clear how, or whether, OpenAI is working on reducing its significant cash burn. “It has nothing to do with reality.”One way OpenAI could improve its margins would be to cut costs.
Persons: CNN Business ’, New York CNN —, Goldman Sachs, that’s, Gil Luria, Davidson, ” Luria, , Luria, There’s, OpenAI, Sam Altman, we’ve, Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Google, Pfizer, Microsoft, Nvidia, Ark Investment Management, Apple, Wall Street, New York Times, Times, CNN, CNBC, Bravo, Locations: New York, Silicon Valley, Silicon
The AI bubble, Taylor said, will be similar to the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s. AdvertisementThe buzz surrounding AI may echo the exuberance and excesses of the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s, OpenAI chairman Bret Taylor said in a podcast that aired on Wednesday. "I think the AI bubble will rhyme with the dot-com bubble and I believe with the benefit of hindsight, most of the excess of the dot-com bubble might have been justified," Taylor added. Most of today's leading tech companies like Amazon and Google, Taylor said, were started during the dot-com bubble. Advertisement"A huge percentage of the gains in the stock market over the past 30 years have more or less been these digital companies created in the dot-com bubble," Taylor said.
Persons: Bret Taylor, Sam Altman's, Taylor, Harry Stebbings, , Sam Altman, Mark Twain, Stebbings, Elon Musk, Goldman Sachs, Jim Covello, hasn't, We’ve, Elon, Musk Organizations: OpenAI's, Service, Google, Business Insider, Stanford, Facebook, Elon Locations: OpenAI, Silicon Valley
It will also end the week with another reputation: a new piece in the grand puzzle being solved by Masayoshi Son. Related storiesMasayoshi Son's AI vision is ambitiousOpenAI CEO Sam Altman will form just one part of Masayoshi Son's AI plans. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty ImagesTo understand Son's grand AI ambitions, it's worth first zooming out to see how SoftBank currently maps out AI investment opportunities. As of June, Vision Fund 1's gains were $21.7 billion, while Vision Fund 2 losses totaled $22.9 billion. AdvertisementSo it's become clear that Son's focus has fallen on the other part of his AI investment stack.
Persons: , Masayoshi Son, Sam, Sam Altman's, ChatGPT, Sam Altman, Andrew Caballero, Reynolds, SoftBank, it'll, Son's, it's, Son, Michael M, Graphcore, Nigel Toon, OpenAI's Altman, Lionel Barber, Barber Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Getty, Business, Microsoft, Vision, Vision Fund, Nvidia, Nikkei, Wall Street, Financial Times Locations: Tokyo, AFP
AdvertisementBill Gates is a self-described optimist about the future of AI, but the tech still raises a few key concerns for him. Experts have warned AI models can be abused for purposes like carrying out scams or cyberattacks or spreading misinformation , among other things. Besides Gates, other business leaders have also expressed concerns about AI and an interest in more regulation and guardrails on the technology. Many share some of Gates' concerns. Looking more at the present, Gates has said he uses AI in his own life to summarize meetings he attends.
Persons: Bill Gates, , Kara Swisher, Gates, Joe Biden's, Goldman Sachs, HubSpot, — it's, you've, Michael Schwarz, Sam Altman, Microsoft's Organizations: Microsoft, Service, AIs, cybercrime Locations: bioterrorism
Total: 25