The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Sam Altman's Wild 2035 Prediction
Episode Date: February 11, 2025OpenAI CEO Sam Altman just dropped a new blog post outlining his vision for AGI, AI economics, and the next decade. His key prediction? By 2035, any individual will have access to as much intelligence... as the world today. Is this realistic, or just more hype? This episode breaks down his arguments, the implications for work, AI scaling, and whether policymakers have plans for what’s coming.Brought to you by:KPMG – Go to www.kpmg.us/ai to learn more about how KPMG can help you drive value with our AI solutions.Vanta - Simplify compliance - https://vanta.com/nlwThe Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, five observations on Sam Altman's three observations on AGI.
Before that in the headlines, AI ads hit the Super Bowl.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
To join the conversation, follow the Discord link in our show notes.
Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief Headlines edition, all the daily AI news you need in around five minutes.
Today, our title topic is going to be the AI Super Bowl commercials, or rather the commercials for AI in the Super Bowl.
This is something I have some amount of experience with and some opinions on, and it's just generally a fun discussion.
But for the sake of completeness at the headlines, I have two stories that I wanted to hit first.
For those of you who are watching on YouTube and just want to get straight to the Super Bowl content,
I would suggest skipping ahead about two minutes.
First of former Open AI co-founder, Ilya Suitsgever, is raising another round of investment for his Safe Superintelligence company,
and this time the valuation appears to be at $20 billion up from $5 billion last September.
The seed round for Safe Superintelligence brought in a billion dollars from five in,
investors, including Sequoia, and Drison Horowitz, and DST. At that stage, the fundraising was based on
little more than Souskaver's reputation as a world-leading AI scientist, and at this point, we still
know very little about the company's work. The startup is pre-revenue, because they have made clear that
they avowedly will not be distracted by business model or revenue or any such things. In fact,
we've talked before about the idea that they are the purest play expression of the notion that
the prize on the other side of AGI is so valuable that it might make more sense to not be
distracted by selling products in the short term. Alongside Sutskaver, the founding team includes
former Open AI researcher Daniel Levy and former Apple AI projects lead Daniel Gross. The company recently
opened a small office in Tel Aviv to complement headquarters in Palo Alto. And basically that's all the
information we got. Now, some people online were a little puzzled. Joe Wilkinson writes,
what do you have to show when you raise around like this? Like, do they have something that's almost
there? Superintelligence that isn't safe? They just, asterisk, have something like 03 that they're
using to prove that they can get to superintelligence, could be even more simple than that.
At this stage, with this level of competitiveness, it could either be, A, some serious and
meaningful progress, or B, just some investors who want to get more capital in and are willing to
mark up the value of their own previous investments. Speaking of big investments, Amazon is
upping the ante on AI spending. While reporting fourth quarter earnings, Amazon said that the current
pace of 26 billion in quarterly CAPEX would be, quote, reasonably representative of what the company
will spend this year. That would equate to about $105 billion this year, far exceeding the $86 billion
expected by analysts. It's also a big jumpover spending commitments from rivals. Meta guided a 60%
increase to $65 billion. Google have announced plans to spend $75 billion, and Microsoft's CEO
Sun Darpy Chai said he's good for his company's $80 billion. This puts Amazon spending in the
same stratosphere as the projected cost of Project Stargate. That $500 billion project was earmarked
at $100 billion for the first year of its four-year plan.
Amazon CEO, Andy Jassy, joined other big tech CEOs in rejecting the idea that deepseek's cheaper
cost would mean a decrease in demand. He said, I think one of the interesting things over the last
couple of weeks is sometimes people make assumptions that if you're able to decrease the cost
of any type of technology component, in this case we're really only talking about inference,
that somehow it's going to lead to less total spend in technology, and we've never seen that
to be the case. In other words, it's Jvon's world and you're all just living in it.
The other business logic here is that Amazon's cloud division is growing at a rapid clip,
And so, scaling to support that, is just a reasonable bet.
AWS generated $107 billion in revenue last year and is expected to hit $150 billion by
26.
And yet, investors are still kind of jittery about the expanded spending on AI alongside
soft earnings projections.
In addition to guiding a big CAPEX increase Amazon's revenue in earnings projections came in
under analyst estimates, leading the stock to drop 4% in after-hours trading.
But with that, let's shift over to the ads for AI in the Super Bowl.
AI was in a number of different places with varying degrees of focus.
For example, it was a part, although just a part of META's ads which were focused on their
Raybans, which were mostly just funny scenes between Chris Pratt and Chris Hemsworth with a cameo
from Jenner.
It didn't really beat AI over the head.
It just leaned into a product that has been very successful and is clearly a platform
that META wants to build on.
Much louder in their focus on AI and their ads was Salesforce, whose multiple spots
all featured Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson and were explicitly focused on agent
Force. Basically, the setup premise was that Agent Force helps businesses avoid the bad situations
that Matthew McConaughey kept finding himself in. And so in this way, they were trying to show
the value of AI, particularly to businesses who would be Agent Force customers. Reactions to the
Salesforce spots were pretty middle of the road. Some people liked them, some people didn't love
them. Mostly they got to chuckle and moved on with their life, which isn't necessarily
where you want to be with your Super Bowl spots, given how much they cost and the opportunity
that they represent. Now, for context, and at this point, most of you know this, I haven't
in fact, made a Super Bowl commercial, one of at this point probably the most infamous of all time,
which is, of course, FTX's Super Bowl ad with Larry David from three years ago.
It was actually just placed on Entertainment Weekly's list of the 23 best Super Bowl ads of all time,
gratifyingly not only because of the infamy that it lives in now, and how accidentally
perfect it is that Larry David actually rejects crypto at the end, but because as they say,
quote, it succeeded in tackling the biggest Super Bowl ad challenge of them all,
introducing a relatively new idea, which is a much harder sell than shilling toothpaste or hamburgers.
Point being, regardless of what you thought of that ad, I've spent a bunch of time thinking about
how to introduce a big new technology category on that Super Bowl stage.
And that brings us to the chat GPT ad, one of the most talked about, at least when it comes to the AI set.
The ad shows the progress of human invention.
Honestly, some similar themes to what we had explored and something that you've seen in the past,
you have a current innovation, you connect it back to the history of human progress as a way to ground yourself.
in a larger story of human exploration and discovery.
It's incredibly different.
It's stylized.
It's all built on the black dot as a way to connect the brand with the storytelling.
It tries in subtle ways to evoke some nostalgia.
And then it ends with the line,
All Progress has a starting point.
What do you want to create next?
Opinions were pretty strong on this one.
Representing one side of the conversation is Jack Appleby,
future social writer who wrote,
ChachyPT, what?
You just lit $7 million on fire.
Worst Super Bowl ad ever.
Imagine having one of the coolest tech innovations ever
and not showing the super audience what it actually does.
For note, the ad time was actually $16 million
because it was a full minute at $8 million per 30 seconds.
That doesn't include any of the production costs.
It sounds like this was prototyped with SORA,
but not actually made with SORA in terms of the final product.
On the other end of the spectrum,
there were some people who thought they got where they were trying to go.
Signal writes,
The Open AI Super Bowl ad gave me major 2013 worldwide developer conference vibes
when Apple showcased a video which remains one of my all-time favorites.
It perfectly distills the company's ethos, masterclass, and defining purpose craft and simplicity.
OpenAI's ad tries to evoke that same deep connection with them life.
It's clear they're pushing for that kind of cultural significance with AI.
Brandon Jacob, he said, I thought the same thing, but the Apple ad has so much story in it.
The commercial tonight felt like they got the vibe and aesthetic, but lacked substance.
Signal said agreed, I think there's a much deeper story to be told with AI in its relation to humanity
and how Open AI plays that role.
Today's ad was not that.
And I think what's important here is that even in the critique, there's this appreciation
of the vibe and the aesthetic and the aspiration. And I think a lot of the folks who responded to it
positively felt connected to the chat GPT brand that they know. It felt aspirational. It felt big.
In terms of my take, first of all, I think it's extremely hard to Monday morning quarterback a Super Bowl ad.
There are so many different ways that you can approach it. There are so many different types
of objectives that the company could have had. One of the things that makes a wrinkle for chat
GBT is that they have the most brand recognition of any AI company. So they might have felt,
and I think this would be a reasonable thing to feel
that they had a little bit more room to be expansive,
they also might have wanted to go for more of an emotional connection
rather than just an advertisement for their particular set of services.
They want to ground this and connect it to the human experience,
especially when AI feels like it can be disconnecting to the human experience.
So I understand all of that.
I think to the extent that there was one thing that I think that I probably would have done differently,
I likely would have tried to get the name ChatGBTBT up front.
I assumed when I started watching
it that it must be the chat GPT ad, but I wasn't positive about that. And I do think that the
aesthetic as cool as it was, was a little hard to tell what was going on exactly until you got to sort
of the moon landing, which is really iconic and very clearly recognizable. But also, that could just be
me. I think on net, it was an ad that extended their brand aesthetic that told the story they wanted
to tell, that got good response from many people, and that's a pretty decent place to be with your
first entrance into the big game. Lastly, there is one more ad that took a very different approach to
telling the story of AI that I have to admit, I think, was my favorite because I was 100% the
target audience. It was an ad that tells the story of a dad who's using Gemini Live to prep for an
interview, using his experience being a dad as his reference points for everything that he has to do
in that new company. Now, Google is absolutely for my money over the last decade, the single best
company at doing tearjerker type ads that aren't overly cheesy or overly rot that just hit the
right note. And this was no exception. If you were one of those people who wanted to see an
AI ad that connected with the real human value of it, this might have been a little bit closer.
It also didn't beat you over the head with AI. It didn't even really say Gemini, I don't think.
It just showed him using it, which I think there might be something positive there, too.
Overall, the totally decent showing for AI at this Super Bowl. What did you guys think? Let me know in
the comments. For now that, that is going to wrap the headlines. Next up, the main episode.
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Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief.
Over the weekend, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman dropped a new blog post called Three Observations.
As is always the case when Altman writes a blog, the whole AI world started discussing it.
What we're going to do today is go through and look at the key parts of the piece.
I'll read a few excerpts.
And then we're going to discuss five observations that I have about these three observations.
I think one big thing that stands out to me
is that we are all still potentially radically underestimating
the scale of the change that we are about to experience.
This piece is all about AGI, artificial general intelligence.
As a funny aside, they make sure to note
that they're not using AGI in any term that would change their relationship with Microsoft.
He actually had to put that in a footnote.
But the point is it's all about the world after AGI in what it's going to mean.
The first part is a version of poetry,
just talking about the steady march of human innovation,
how it's always led to new prosperity.
And then we get to the sub-theme,
which actually isn't one of the three points,
but which is woven throughout.
Sam basically says,
in some sense,
AGI is just another tool
in this ever taller scaffolding
of human progress we're building together.
In another sense,
it is the beginning of something
for which it's hard not to say
this time it's different.
The economic growth in front of us
looks astonishing,
and we can now imagine a world
where we cure all diseases,
have much more time to enjoy our families,
and can fully realize our creative potential.
And here's the key line.
In a decade, perhaps,
everyone on Earth will be capable of accomplishing more than the most impactful person can today.
We'll come back to that, but first let's get into what he states are his three observations,
specifically about the economics of AI.
The first is, the intelligence of an AI model roughly equals the log of the resources used to train and run it.
He identifies those resources as training compute, data, and inference compute.
And he says, it appears that you can spend arbitrary amounts of money and get continuous
and predictable gains.
The scaling laws that predict this are accurate over many orders of magnitude.
Number two, the cost to use a given level of AI falls about 10x every 12 months, and lower prices
lead to much more use. This is our own version of Moore's Law and JVon's Paradox all in one.
The specific example he points to is the token cost of GPT4 dropping 150 times between early
2023 and mid-20204. Last observation, the socioeconomic value of linearly increasing intelligence
is super exponential in nature. A consequence of this is that we see no reason for exponentially
increasing investment to stop in the near future, i.e. this is not a bubble. Then he goes on to talk
about some specifics. A key piece of this is agents, which he says will eventually feel like virtual
co-workers and you get the feeling that eventually is later this year. Pointing to software engineering
agents, he said they will eventually be capable of doing most things a software engineer at a top
company with a few years of experience could do for tasks up to a couple days long. Importantly, he says
it will not have the biggest new ideas and will require lots of human supervision and direction.
Still, he writes, imagine it as a real but relatively junior virtual co-worker.
Now imagine 1,000 of them, or 1 million of them.
Now imagine such agents in every field of knowledge work.
And yet somewhat paradoxically, in the next section, he talks about how at least in the
short run, everything will go on the same as it has.
People in 2025, he say, will mostly spend their time in the same way they did in 2024.
But he writes, the future will be coming at us in a way that is impossible to ignore.
And the long-term changes to our society and economy will be huge.
We'll find new things to do, new ways to be useful to.
each other in new ways to compete, but they may not look very much like the jobs of today.
So what matters in that future? Well, he says agency willfulness and determination will likely
be extremely valuable. Correctly deciding what to do and figuring out how to navigate an ever-changing
world will have huge value. Resilience and adaptability will be helpful skills to cultivate.
AGI will be the biggest lever ever on human willfulness and enable individual people to have more
impact than ever before. He points out that the impact will be uneven, specifically saying that the
scientific progress that comes from AGI may be the impact that surpasses everything else.
In terms of how this affects specific prices, he says that many will fall dramatically,
specifically those where the constraint is the cost of intelligence or the cost of energy,
but luxury goods and inherently limited resources like land may go up even more.
And then he talks about policy and society and how unclear what to do next and how to address
this future really is.
They have only the barest of guidance.
We believe Altman writes that trending more towards individual empowerment is important,
with the other likely path we can see is a.
AI being used by authoritarian governments to control their population through mass surveillance and
loss of autonomy. He points out that it's going to be important that the benefits of AGI are distributed
broadly, but there may need to be new ideas for how to do it. One specific warning, vague though it is,
in particular he writes, it does seem like the balance of power between capital and labor could
easily get messed up, and this may require early intervention. He continues, we're open to strange
sounding ideas like giving some compute budget to enable everyone on Earth to use a lot of AI, but we can also
see a lot of ways where just relentlessly driving the cost of intelligence as low as possible has the
desired effect. And then he ends on this doozy. Anyone in 2035 should be able to marshal the intellectual
capacity equivalent to everyone in 2025. Let me read that again. Anyone in 2035 should be able to
marshal the intellectual capacity equivalent to everyone in 2025. Alman is saying that all of us,
all of us listening to this podcast and everyone else living their lives around the world,
all of the intellectual capacity they have access to from themselves, their friends, their family,
and the AI at their fingertips combined is what anyone will have access to one decade from now.
And that, it seems, is where Altman finds his optimism.
He concludes, there's a great deal of talent right now without the resources to fully express itself.
And if we change that, the resulting creative output of the world will lead to tremendous benefit for us all.
All right. So like I said, now let's go do five observations from my reading of this.
The first is that there's a clear way in here on the scaling debate.
that we've been having for the last few months,
with Altman continuing to come down on the line that scaling laws hold.
Now, what's interesting is that he is now bundling inference into those scaling laws,
so rather than drawing test time compute,
which is the way that they're scaling these reasoning models,
as something fundamentally different.
It's just a different version of the same equation
of more resources equals better output.
The unspoken piece here is that from where they're sitting,
there's no reason to think that this doesn't just carry through
all the way to whatever we decide AGI is,
which is, of course, a controversial point,
given that there are some like meta-chief scientist John Lacoon,
who don't think that today's current architectures can ever get to AGI.
So nothing particularly new here but a doubling down of OpenA.I.
and Sam Altman's previously stated positions.
Second observation, again a very obvious one,
but it really is insane just how fast the cost of intelligence is coming down.
We're thinking about this in super-intelligent,
where we're pricing a product that has some meaningful upfront cost
because of the modality of interaction with AI.
But we're trying to figure out if we expected to cost a tenth of what it costs now
in a year how we should price it. One novel point here is Sam officially reifying Javon's paradox
by arguing that lower prices do in fact lead to much more use. He doesn't back it up with any
specific examples, but that's something I'd be interested to see from OpenAI's point of view.
A third observation and a big sub-theme from this is the once again very obvious point,
but one which I'm still not sure we're totally grocking, which is that there's a significant skill
shift that's going to be required. Sam obviously paints a picture of the skills that he
things are going to be most important, agency, willfulness, determination. But there's another one
implicit in this idea of having access to a thousand junior virtual co-workers or a million junior
virtual co-workers across every field of knowledge work. Presumably, that means we all become
managers, and that is obviously a very different skill set than doing whatever it is that we'd now
be managing the robots to do. One of the things that I think that we are just starting to put together
now is that the skill shift that's going to be most required with AI is probably less going
to be specific prompting techniques and tool usage, but instead totally different.
managerial disciplines and entirely new ways of thinking. A fourth point, which I think, again,
lies just under the surface here, is the magnitude of this change that's coming. Altman has for some
time been trying to downplay this, and there's even a little bit of that in here now, the idea of
people in 2025 doing the same thing as people in 2024. However, it also very clearly feels like
he's starting to get to the next point of his narrative. It comes out in this line where he says,
in some sense, AGI is just another tool in the scaffolding of human progress, but, and you get the
impression that this is what he really means, this time it's actually different. He also has a line just
before the agency willfulness and determination line that feels like maybe it's a thesis statement
for the whole piece. The future will be coming at us in a way that is impossible to ignore,
and the long-term changes to our society and economy will be huge. I think you can maybe read this
piece as trying to put a stamp on this scaling conversation and saying that from open AIs point of view,
yes, AGI is still coming, despite what you've heard about the problems with AI scaling.
My fifth observation is that there are no real policy ideas here,
say perhaps the very lightly floated idea of universal basic AI or a universal basic compute budget.
As Professor Ethan Mollick points out, there is no clear vision of what the world looks like,
and the labs are placing the burden on policymakers to decide what to do with what they make.
No, I'm sure that what Altman and OpenAI would say is that they're trying to provoke a conversation
that we can all have, not just expecting policymakers to figure it all out for themselves,
but the notion that there may need to be a little bit more prescription on at least the type
of conversations that we're having might be a place to explore in the next blog post.
Ultimately, all of this feels like another log on the fire of acceleration whose flame has just
gotten bigger and bigger over the last couple of months. I personally can feel right now,
or at least imagine myself to feel, some shifting sands that are going to have fairly
dramatic impacts on the years to come. All of those things, of course, which we will be
talking about every day here at the AI Daily Brief for the foreseeable future. But for now,
that is where we'll wrap. Appreciate you listening or watching as always. And until next time,
peace.
