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Former Google CEO warns ‘AI could surpass human intelligence in next few years'; what is artificial superintelligence and why it matters
Former Google CEO warns ‘AI could surpass human intelligence in next few years'; what is artificial superintelligence and why it matters

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Former Google CEO warns ‘AI could surpass human intelligence in next few years'; what is artificial superintelligence and why it matters

As debates around AI ethics, automation, and job displacement continue to dominate public discourse, a far more consequential development is quietly emerging—one that, according to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, is not receiving nearly the attention it deserves. In a recent episode of the Special Competitive Studies Project podcast, Schmidt delivered a compelling warning: Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) is on the horizon, and society is dangerously underprepared to face its arrival. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns: AI will surpass all human intelligence in few years As per the public conversations often fous on near-term AI risks such as algorithmic bias or job automation, Schmidt's concern lies in what lies just beyond the visible curve of innovation. He points to the emergence of ASI , a form of intelligence vastly superior to that of any individual human as the next seismic shift in technological evolution . Unlike Artificial General Intelligence ( AGI ), which seeks to match human cognitive abilities , ASI represents a system capable of surpassing not just individual intelligence, but potentially the collective intelligence of all humans combined. 'People do not understand what happens when you have intelligence at this level, which is largely free,' Schmidt warned. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Free P2,000 GCash eGift UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo Watch From writing code to replacing coders—AI's next leap is already here One of Schmidt's most provocative predictions is that AI could make most programming jobs obsolete within a year. He cites advances in recursive self-improvement—where AI systems write and improve their own code using formal systems like Lean—as a key driver of this shift. Currently, AI is already contributing significantly to software development. In Schmidt's words: 'Ten to twenty percent of the code in research labs like OpenAI and Anthropic is now being written by AI itself.' As these systems continue to evolve, they will not only become faster and more efficient but also begin outperforming even elite graduate-level human mathematicians in areas such as advanced coding and structured reasoning. This presents a foundational change in the role of human labor in tech—moving from creator to supervisor, or potentially being removed from the loop altogether. Schmidt warns the jump from AGI to ASI could outpace global systems According to Schmidt, many in Silicon Valley are in agreement that Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)—a system capable of human-like reasoning across disciplines will be achieved within the next three to five years. However, he emphasises that AGI is merely a stepping stone. The more dramatic leap, he says, will occur just a year or two after AGI: the rise of Artificial Superintelligence (ASI). He calls this trajectory the 'San Francisco Consensus'—a term reflecting the growing alignment among tech elites about the short timeline to ASI. 'This occurs within six years, just based on scaling,' Schmidt stated. Unlike earlier technological shifts, the transition to ASI may happen so rapidly and dramatically that traditional systems—governance, legal, economic—may be unable to adapt in time. Schmidt warns the world is unprepared for the coming age of superintelligence Despite the potentially transformative—and even existential—implications of ASI, Schmidt points out a critical gap in public awareness and discourse. The issue, he argues, is not just the speed of AI's evolution but the lack of conceptual language and institutional frameworks to engage with it meaningfully. 'There's no language for what happens with the arrival of this,' he remarked. 'This is happening faster than our society, our democracy, our laws will interact.' In other words, the world's democratic and policy systems are trailing far behind the pace of innovation, creating a dangerous mismatch between technological capability and societal readiness. As AI systems move beyond human capabilities, Schmidt presents two possible paths forward. On one side lies the promise of a technological renaissance, driven by superintelligent systems capable of solving some of humanity's greatest challenges. On the other lies the risk of institutional collapse, ethical crisis, and unprecedented societal upheaval. 'Superintelligence isn't a question of if, but when,' Schmidt seems to caution. And the real danger, he suggests, may be our collective failure to adequately prepare. Schmidt urges to prepare for ASI before it's too late Eric Schmidt's warnings are not based on speculative science fiction—they're grounded in conversations happening today among the people building tomorrow's technologies. Whether one agrees with his timeline or not, his message is clear: Artificial Superintelligence is not a distant concept—it is fast becoming a present reality. As this reality approaches, the world must shift its focus from narrow debates about near-term AI risks to a broader, deeper dialogue about long-term governance, ethics, and preparedness for what could be the most transformative force in human history.

Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback
Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback

Meta (META, Financials) is diving headfirst into the race for Artificial Superintelligence and this time, it's not holding back. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reignited the term Zuck Bucks; once a nickname for campaign donations, it's now shorthand for eight- and nine-figure signing packages aimed at luring the best AI minds in the world, according to a Reuters report. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Sign with META. Faced with talent losses and a disappointing release of its Llama 4 model, Meta has ramped up hiring and it's not being subtle. From a $14.3 billion investment in Scale AI to attempts at poaching Safe Superintelligence's Ilya Sutskever, Meta is making one thing clear: it wants back in the lead. Zuckerberg reportedly failed to recruit Sutskever but may be close to landing SSI co-founder Daniel Gross and NFDG's Nat Friedman. These aren't just star names they're magnets; and Meta hopes they'll help rebuild a team that's been bleeding to labs like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind. Meanwhile, Meta is forming an elite Superintelligence unit to push the boundaries of what AI can do. But internal divisions remain; Meta's Chief AI Scientist Yann LeCun has publicly questioned the long-term viability of large language models the very thing the company's top rivals are doubling down on. To complicate matters, Meta is betting on a mix of technologies: reasoning-based LLMs, multimodal AI, and even geopolitical hedges. For example, it's developing a new B40 chip tailored for the Chinese market, just in case export restrictions eventually ease. Zuckerberg's bet? Talent first; product later. This isn't classic M&A it's AI land-grabbing. Meta is willing to buy pre-product, pre-revenue startups if it means acquiring breakthrough IP and elite researchers. Profitability can wait; ASI supremacy can't. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback
Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Zuck Bucks Are Back -- And This Time They're Fueling Meta's AI Comeback

Meta (META, Financials) is diving headfirst into the race for Artificial Superintelligence and this time, it's not holding back. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reignited the term Zuck Bucks; once a nickname for campaign donations, it's now shorthand for eight- and nine-figure signing packages aimed at luring the best AI minds in the world, according to a Reuters report. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Sign with META. Faced with talent losses and a disappointing release of its Llama 4 model, Meta has ramped up hiring and it's not being subtle. From a $14.3 billion investment in Scale AI to attempts at poaching Safe Superintelligence's Ilya Sutskever, Meta is making one thing clear: it wants back in the lead. Zuckerberg reportedly failed to recruit Sutskever but may be close to landing SSI co-founder Daniel Gross and NFDG's Nat Friedman. These aren't just star names they're magnets; and Meta hopes they'll help rebuild a team that's been bleeding to labs like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind. Meanwhile, Meta is forming an elite Superintelligence unit to push the boundaries of what AI can do. But internal divisions remain; Meta's Chief AI Scientist Yann LeCun has publicly questioned the long-term viability of large language models the very thing the company's top rivals are doubling down on. To complicate matters, Meta is betting on a mix of technologies: reasoning-based LLMs, multimodal AI, and even geopolitical hedges. For example, it's developing a new B40 chip tailored for the Chinese market, just in case export restrictions eventually ease. Zuckerberg's bet? Talent first; product later. This isn't classic M&A it's AI land-grabbing. Meta is willing to buy pre-product, pre-revenue startups if it means acquiring breakthrough IP and elite researchers. Profitability can wait; ASI supremacy can't. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio

'AI 2.0 Has Arrived': James Altucher Warns of Major U.S. AI Shift from Inside Musk's New Supercomputer Facility
'AI 2.0 Has Arrived': James Altucher Warns of Major U.S. AI Shift from Inside Musk's New Supercomputer Facility

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

'AI 2.0 Has Arrived': James Altucher Warns of Major U.S. AI Shift from Inside Musk's New Supercomputer Facility

BALTIMORE, June 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In a newly released briefing, tech entrepreneur and bestselling author James Altucher reveals details of an advanced artificial intelligence project quietly developed by Elon Musk — with the backing of the U.S. government. According to Altucher's report, the U.S. has entered what he calls a 'second wave' of artificial intelligence — and at the center of it is Project Colossus, a secretive facility operated by Musk's xAI out of Memphis, Tennessee. Unlike anything the public has seen before, Project Colossus is designed to scale beyond current AI tools and into a new phase Altucher refers to as Artificial Superintelligence — or AI 2.0. A Quiet Presidential Push Altucher points to a key moment that set everything in motion: the repeal of Biden-era regulations on AI development. 'In one of his FIRST acts as President… Donald Trump overturned Executive Order #14110.' The executive reversal, Altucher says, cleared the path for Musk to accelerate his most ambitious project yet. Inside Project Colossus Altucher claims Musk's supercomputer is already live, housed in a discreet facility loaded with more than 200,000 high-performance AI chips. 'Right here, inside this warehouse in Memphis, Tennessee… lies a massive supercomputer Musk calls 'Project Colossus.'' He also reports that further upgrades are coming within weeks — including the addition of next-generation hardware that could dramatically increase Colossus' capabilities. From Chatbots to Conscious Machines? According to Altucher, most people are still thinking in terms of consumer-facing AI — like ChatGPT. But this next generation, he says, is something entirely different. 'AI 2.0… gives that knowledge to intelligent machines that I believe will solve our problems for us.' He warns that a major upgrade could be revealed as early as July 1, marking what he calls a 'breakthrough moment' for American AI leadership. About James Altucher James Altucher is a computer scientist, entrepreneur, and bestselling author. He previously helped develop IBM's Deep Blue supercomputer and built early AI-based trading systems on Wall Street. His latest work explores the rapid emergence of Artificial Superintelligence and its implications for national strategy and technological control. Media Contact:Derek WarrenPublic Relations ManagerParadigm Press GroupEmail: dwarren@

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