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A mid-2026 checkup on predictions for AGI, ASI, and Singularity timelines, with the author projecting AGI by 2028, ASI by 2030, and Singularity by 2032.
The article observes a decline in discussion about 'fast take-off'—the idea of rapid, uncontrolled AI capability growth—within relevant communities, suggesting a shift in discourse among AI safety and futurist circles.
A brief opinion piece questioning whether reliance on AI for software development leads to skill atrophy among engineers, potentially creating a plateau in AI progress until recursive self-improvement becomes possible.
Anthropic cofounder Dario Amodei predicts the technological singularity will arrive by 2028.
A rap battle event featuring tech bros and themes of the singularity.
Elad Gil reflects on the accelerating pace of AI progress, linking to a review of Charles Stross's sci-fi novel Accelerando, which explores singularity themes.
A discussion questioning whether AI will free humans from labor or create more work, contrasting the promise of post-scarcity with AI CEOs' claims of increased labor needs.
The post discusses fears of an AI-driven technological singularity, referencing the 2014 movie Transcendence and Anthropic's recent call for a globally coordinated pause on advanced AI development due to risks of recursive self-improvement.
The release of Fable 5 has sparked widespread discussion. Andrej Karpathy calls it a major version leap, some consider it their "singularity moment," while others worry about the future of software engineering. This article summarizes 10 most noteworthy reactions.
A 2016 talk by Idle Words criticizing the alarmist view of superintelligence and the arguments of Nick Bostrom, Stephen Hawking, and Elon Musk, arguing that the AI takeover scenario is overhyped.
Explores the subjective time compression an ASI would experience due to vastly faster processing speeds compared to human brains, suggesting one month of human time equals 820,000 years of ASI thought, raising alignment implications.
The article explores the possibilities of combining quantum computers with AI, such as dramatic increases in computing speed, instant internet, encryption failure, AI going out of control, and even threats to human survival. It also quotes Elon Musk's views, and is overall a personal commentary.
Demis Hassabis suggests that the Singularity could be just a few years away, potentially triggered by the arrival of true AGI.
Google I/O keynote highlighted a shift in AI-driven science, contrasting specialized tools like WeatherNext with the rise of agentic AI systems that can conduct research autonomously, signaling a realignment in resources and enthusiasm.
DeepMind's CEO compares current AI progress to being at the early stages of the technological singularity, suggesting transformative changes ahead.
Demis Hassabis closed Google I/O by stating that we may be in the 'foothills of the singularity' and introduced Gemini for Science tools to accelerate scientific discovery.
Demis Hassabis stated at Google I/O that artificial general intelligence is just a few years away, marking a significant shift from his previously more conservative timeline of 5-10 years.
A developer expresses amazement at the smoothness of wireless development using OpenAI's Codex, noting that it enables seamless iteration from investigation to testing and fix, and suggests the singularity is approaching.
Argues that current AI does not meet AGI standards because it lacks recursive self-improvement, and criticizes those who claim otherwise as having a weak definition of AGI.
A Twitter user shares a speculative timeline predicting major AI milestones from 2026 to 2030, culminating in the singularity.