Can AGI Really Happen with Today's Technology?

https://img.inleo.io/DQmVTvsrWmxfDE2LZ9SWX6h7H8hXqjFJSEpuMMcipzyV2D3/ai-generated-8686301_1280.webp

source

Sam Altman if you don't already know him is the current CEO of OpenAI, the company that's makes the Chatgpt you see possible. I would say they're arguably the best AI tool developers in the platform. They're clearly ahead of Google when it comes to AI and so I think it's worth paying attention to whatever the CEO will say about AI technology and its future.

Now that's I've got the introduction out of the way let's talk AGI, Artificial General Intelligence which is basically the next phase of AI. This is supposed to be the most powerful version of AI with more intelligence the us humans and with the power to develop or grow in its intelligence all by itself.

How close are we to such a technology? I'm not expert just an enthusiast but Sam Altman has an answer to this question.

He says we’re close to AGI with the current hardware tech we have and it's actually a possibility to have it right now.

But what does that actually mean? I ask this because to be realistic, AGI is still an idea, there are experts that agree with Sam Altman that it could happen soon and there are others that doubt it, infact they doubt it'll ever come at all. The interesting thing is that no one can fully agree on what AGI should be, exactly. Because we could ask, is it just mimicking human intelligence or does it need to actually think like us?

There's a chance Sam Altman is being honest and there's a chance he's just following Elon's footsteps by promising investors something which in actual fact may not happen soon. Right now OpenAI is worth billions of dollars and so much of that value is based off of bold claims about the possibility of AGI. With AGI coming, the investor's value will shoot up since the company's value will rise because of AGI utility and usefulness in the world. So he probably has to make such a claim to keep the belief alive or he could be telling the truth.

Posted Using InLeo Alpha



0
0
0.000
0 comments