AGI could be here in three years, says DeepMind CEO
Demis Hassabis views the next wave of AI agents as a stress test for society in preparation for significantly more powerful systems.
Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis believes progress toward artificial general intelligence (AGI) is moving faster than expected and that society now has only a few years to prepare. He believes AGI could arrive around 2030, though acknowledges it could be here in 2029 — or even sooner.
In an interview with Axios, Hassabis said that today’s AI agents — systems capable of performing tasks independently — should be viewed as a sort of “practice run” for significantly more powerful AI in the future. He also warned that governments, economists, and society at large are not taking this development seriously enough.
One particular risk he highlighted is that AI systems in the future might begin to improve their own development. “All the leading labs are pretty focused on that,” Hassabis told Axios. “It will yield clear benefits in the form of faster research. But there are also risks associated with that type of system.”
Related Stories
AI News
Tartan Army devastated to leave Boston after World Cup matches, "You've been the best hosts"
40 minutes ago
AI News
Women’s T20 World Cup: Australia beat Netherlands by 98 runs to continue unbeaten start to tournament
40 minutes ago
AI News
WORLD CUP DAILY, June 20: U.S. beats Australia; 4 matches Saturday involve Germany, Sweden
40 minutes ago
AI News
Which teams have qualified for the World Cup 2026 knockouts, round of 32?
40 minutes ago
AI News
Iran latest: Strait of Hormuz closes as Tehran and accuses US and Israel of violating ceasefire deal
40 minutes ago
AI News
Jharkhand Rajya Sabha polls: RJD claims all four MLAs voted for INDIA bloc candidate
40 minutes ago
AI News
How the Tenth Schedule is reshaping India's coalition politics ahead of monsoon session
40 minutes ago
AI News
India goes football crazy: Is politics holding the country back?
40 minutes ago