{"id":388801,"date":"2025-04-13T19:44:58","date_gmt":"2025-04-13T14:14:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/when-will-ai-be-smarter-than-humans-dont-ask-crypto-news\/"},"modified":"2025-04-13T20:30:11","modified_gmt":"2025-04-13T15:00:11","slug":"when-will-ai-be-smarter-than-humans-dont-ask-crypto-news","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/when-will-ai-be-smarter-than-humans-dont-ask-crypto-news\/","title":{"rendered":"When Will AI Be Smarter Than\u00a0Humans? Don\u2019t Ask &#8211; Crypto News"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<div>\n<div id=\"article-index-0\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> (Bloomberg Opinion) &#8212; If you\u2019ve heard the term artificial general intelligence, or AGI, it probably makes you think of a humanish intelligence, like the honey-voiced AI love interest in the movie Her, or a superhuman one, like Skynet from The Terminator. At any rate, something science-fictional and far off. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-1\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> But now a growing number of people in the tech industry and even outside it are prophesying AGI or \u201chuman-level\u201d AI in the very near future. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-2\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> These people may believe what they are saying, but it is at least partly hype designed to get investors to throw billions of dollars at AI companies. Yes, big changes are almost certainly on the way, and you should be preparing for them. But for most of us, calling them AGI is at best a distraction and at worst deliberate misdirection. Business leaders and policymakers need a better way to think about what\u2019s coming. Fortunately, there is one. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-4\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Sam Altman of OpenAI, Dario Amodei of Anthropic and Elon Musk of xAI (the thing he\u2019s least famous for) have all said recently that AGI, or something like it, will arrive within a couple of years. More measured voices like Google DeepMind\u2019s Demis Hassabis and Meta\u2019s Yann LeCun see it being at least five to 10 years out. More recently, the meme has gone mainstream, with journalists including the New York Times\u2019\u00a0Ezra Klein and Kevin Roose arguing that society should get ready for something like AGI in the very near future. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-5\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> I say \u201csomething like\u201d because oftentimes, these people flirt with the term AGI and then retreat to a more equivocal phrasing like \u201cpowerful AI.\u201d And what they may mean by it varies enormously \u2014 from AI that can do almost any individual cognitive task as well as a human\u00a0but might still be quite specialized (Klein, Roose), to doing Nobel Prize-level work (Amodei, Altman), to thinking like an actual human in all respects (Hassabis), to operating in the physical world (LeCun), or simply being \u201csmarter than the smartest human\u201d (Musk). <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-6\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> So, are any of these \u201creally\u201d AGI? <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-7\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> The truth is, it doesn\u2019t matter. If there is even such a thing as AGI \u2014 which, I will argue, there isn\u2019t \u2014 it\u2019s not going to be a sharp threshold we cross. To the people who tout it, AGI is now simply shorthand for the idea that something very disruptive is imminent: software that can\u2019t merely code an app, draft a school assignment, write bedtime stories for your children or book a holiday \u2014 but might throw lots of people out of work, make major scientific breakthroughs,\u00a0and provide frightening power to hackers, terrorists, corporations and governments. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-8\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> This prediction is worth taking seriously, and calling it AGI does have a way of making people sit up and listen. But instead of talking about AGI or human-level AI, let\u2019s talk about different types of AI, and what they will and won\u2019t be able to do. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-10\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Some form of human-level intelligence has been the goal ever since the AI race kicked off 70 years ago. For decades, the best that could be done was \u201cnarrow AI\u201d like IBM\u2019s chess-winning Deep Blue, or Google\u2019s AlphaFold, which predicts protein structures and won its creators (including Hassabis) a share of the chemistry Nobel last year. Both were far beyond human-level, but only for one highly specific task. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-11\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> If AGI now suddenly seems closer, it\u2019s because the large-language models underlying ChatGPT and its ilk appear to be both more humanlike and more general-purpose. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-12\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> LLMs interact with us in plain language. They can give at least plausible-looking answers to most questions. They write pretty good fiction, at least when it\u2019s very short. (For longer stories, they lose track of characters and plot details.) They\u2019re scoring ever higher on benchmark tests of skills like coding, medical or bar exams, and math problems. They\u2019re getting better at step-by-step reasoning and more complex tasks. When the most gung-ho AI folks talk about AGI being around the corner, it\u2019s basically a more advanced form of these models they\u2019re talking about. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-13\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> It\u2019s not that LLMs won\u2019t have big impacts. Some software companies already plan to hire fewer engineers. Most tasks that follow a similar process every time \u2014 making medical diagnoses, drafting legal dockets, writing research briefs, creating marketing campaigns\u00a0and so on \u2014 will be things a human worker can at least partly outsource to AI. Some already are. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-14\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> That will make those workers more productive, which could lead to the elimination of some jobs. Though not necessarily: Geoffrey Hinton, the Nobel Prize-winning computer scientist known as the godfather\u00a0of AI, infamously predicted that AI would soon make radiologists obsolete. Today, there\u2019s a shortage of them in the US. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-15\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> But in an important sense, LLMs are still \u201cnarrow AI.\u201d They can ace one job while being lousy at a seemingly adjacent one \u2014 a phenomenon known as the jagged frontier. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-16\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> For example, an AI might pass a bar exam with flying colors but botch turning a conversation with a client into a legal brief. It may answer some questions perfectly, but regularly \u201challucinate\u201d (i.e.\u00a0invent facts) on others. LLMs do well with problems that can be solved using clear-cut rules, but in some newer tests where the rules were more ambiguous, models that scored 80% or more on other benchmarks struggled even to reach single figures. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-17\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> And even if LLMs started to beat these tests, too, they would still be narrow. It\u2019s one thing to tackle a defined, limited problem, however difficult. It\u2019s quite another to take on what people actually do in a typical workday. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-18\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Even a mathematician doesn\u2019t just spend all day doing math problems. People do countless things that can\u2019t be benchmarked because they aren\u2019t bounded problems with right or wrong answers. We weigh conflicting priorities, ditch failing plans, make allowances for incomplete knowledge, develop workarounds, act on hunches, read the room\u00a0and, above all, interact constantly with the highly unpredictable and irrational intelligences that are other human beings. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-19\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Indeed, one argument against LLMs ever being able to do Nobel Prize-level work is that the most brilliant scientists aren\u2019t those who know the most, but those who challenge conventional wisdom, propose unlikely hypotheses and ask questions nobody else has thought to ask. That\u2019s pretty much the opposite of an LLM, which is designed to find the likeliest consensus answer based on all the available information. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-20\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> So we might one day be able to build an LLM that can do almost any individual cognitive task as well as a human. It might be able to string together a whole series of tasks to solve a bigger problem. By some definitions, it would be human-level AI. But it would still be as dumb as a brick if you put it to work in an office. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-21\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Human Intelligence Isn\u2019t \u2018General\u2019 <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-22\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> A core problem with the idea of AGI is that it\u2019s based on a highly anthropocentric notion of what intelligence is. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-23\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Most AI research treats intelligence as a more or less linear measure. It assumes that at some point, machines will reach human-level or \u201cgeneral\u201d intelligence, and then perhaps \u201csuperintelligence,\u201d at which point they either become Skynet and destroy us\u00a0or turn into benevolent gods who take care of all our needs. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-24\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> But there\u2019s a strong argument that human intelligence is not in fact \u201cgeneral.\u201d Our minds have evolved for the very specific challenge of being us. Our body size and shape, the kinds of food we can digest, the predators we once faced, the size of our kin groups, the way we communicate, even the strength of gravity\u00a0and the wavelengths of light we perceive have all gone into determining what our minds are good at. Other animals have many forms of intelligence we lack: A spider can distinguish predators from prey in the vibrations of its web, an elephant can remember migration routes thousands of miles long, and in an octopus, each tentacle literally has a mind of its own. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-25\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> In a 2017 essay for Wired, Kevin Kelly argued that we should think of human intelligence not as being at the top of some evolutionary tree, but as just one point within a cluster of Earth-based intelligences that itself is a tiny smear in a universe of all possible alien and machine intelligences. This, he wrote, blows apart the \u201cmyth of a superhuman AI\u201d that can do everything far better than us. Rather, we should expect \u201cmany hundreds of extra-human new species of thinking, most different from humans, none that will be general purpose, and none that will be an instant god solving major problems in a flash.\u201d <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-26\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> This is a feature, not a bug. For most needs, specialized intelligences will, I suspect, be both cheaper and more reliable than a jack-of-all-trades that resembles us as closely as possible. Not to mention that they\u2019re less likely to rise up and demand their rights. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-28\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> None of this is to dismiss the huge leaps we can expect from AI in the next few years. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-29\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> One leap that\u2019s already begun is \u201cagentic\u201d AI. Agents are still based on LLMs, but instead of merely analyzing information, they can carry out actions like making a purchase or filling in a web form. Zoom, for example, soon plans to launch agents that can scour a meeting transcript to create action items, draft follow-up emails and schedule the next meeting. So far, the performance of AI agents is mixed, but as with LLMs, expect it to dramatically improve to the point where quite sophisticated processes can be automated. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-30\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Some may claim this is AGI. But once again, that\u2019s more confusing than enlightening. Agents won\u2019t be \u201cgeneral,\u201d but more like personal assistants with extremely one-track minds. You might have dozens of them. Even if they make your productivity skyrocket, managing them will be like juggling dozens of different software apps \u2014 much like you\u2019re already doing. Perhaps you\u2019ll get an agent to manage all your agents, but it too will be restricted to whatever goals you set it. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-31\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> And what will happen when millions or billions of agents are interacting together online is anybody\u2019s guess. Perhaps, just as trading algorithms have set off inexplicable market \u201cflash crashes,\u201d they\u2019ll trigger one another in unstoppable chain reactions that paralyze half the internet. More worryingly, malicious actors could mobilize swarms of agents to sow havoc. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-32\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Still, LLMs and their agents are just one type of AI. Within a few years, we may have fundamentally different kinds. LeCun\u2019s lab at Meta, for instance, is one of several that are trying to build what\u2019s called embodied AI. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-33\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> The theory is that by putting AI in a robot body in the physical world, or in a simulation, it can learn about objects, location and motion \u2014 the building blocks of human understanding\u00a0from which higher concepts can flow. By contrast, LLMs, trained purely on vast amounts of text, ape human thought processes on the surface but show no evidence that they actually have them, or even that they think in any meaningful sense. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-34\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Will embodied AI lead to truly thinking machines, or just very dexterous robots? Right now, that\u2019s impossible to say. Even if it\u2019s the former, though, it would still be misleading to call it AGI. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-35\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> To go back to the point about evolution: Just as it would be absurd to expect a human to think like a spider or an elephant, it would be absurd to expect an oblong robot with six wheels and four arms that doesn\u2019t sleep, eat or have sex \u2014 let alone form friendships, wrestle with its conscience\u00a0or contemplate its own mortality \u2014 to think like a human. It might be able to carry Grandma from the living room to the bedroom, but it will both conceive of and perform the task utterly differently from the way we would. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-36\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Many of the things AI will be capable of, we can\u2019t even imagine today. The best way to track and make sense of that progress will be to stop trying to compare it to humans, or to anything from the movies, and instead just keep asking: What does it actually do? <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-37\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> More From Bloomberg Opinion:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-38\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-39\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> Gideon Lichfield is the former editor-in-chief of Wired magazine and MIT Technology Review. He writes Futurepolis, a newsletter on the future of democracy. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div id=\"article-index-40\" class=\"storyParagraph\">\n<p> More stories like this are available on <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/opinion\">bloomberg.com\/opinion<\/a> <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(Bloomberg Opinion) &#8212; If you\u2019ve heard the term artificial general intelligence, or AGI, it probably makes you think of a humanish intelligence, like the honey-voiced AI love interest in the movie Her, or a superhuman one, like Skynet from The Terminator. At any rate, something science-fictional and far off. But now a growing number of [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":360602,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[8],"tags":[9379,9136,9493,188,183,185,186,34454,8707,187,184,189,150,182,190],"class_list":["post-388801","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-technology","tag-agi","tag-ai-companies","tag-artificial-general-intelligence","tag-blockchain-tech","tag-blockchain-technology","tag-crypto-technology","tag-cryptocurrency-technology","tag-human-level-ai","tag-large-language-models","tag-metaverse-technology","tag-nft-technology","tag-soul-bound-token","tag-tech","tag-technology","tag-token-technology"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/388801","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=388801"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/388801\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":388804,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/388801\/revisions\/388804"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/360602"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=388801"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=388801"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dripp.zone\/news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=388801"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}