Microsoft is the latest company to announce efforts to develop superintelligence, a hypothetical form of artificial intelligence that would surpass human capabilities. However, some experts fear that ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dr. Lance B. Eliot is a world-renowned AI scientist and consultant. In today’s column, I examine the predicted battle between ...
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son said OpenAI's newest model is showing signs of "super intelligence." Speaking to CNBC, Son, whose ...
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son said his forecast of artificial superintelligence arriving in 10 years was "conservative" and ...
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Microsoft is forming a new team that wants to build artificial intelligence that is vastly more capable than humans in certain domains, starting with medical ...
In Silicon Valley, many investors, founders, and tech giants often frame AI as an all-powerful force — something approaching omniscience. They call it artificial general intelligence, or AGI, a ...
The Thinking Machines Lab founder and former CTO of OpenAI tells WIRED she isn’t interested in automating people out of jobs. Instead, she’s building AI that can collaborate.
Microsoft is pursuing a more powerful form of AI called “superintelligence” it hopes will be capable of making advances in areas like medicine and materials science. Mustafa Suleyman, chief of the ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) for science has rapidly gained momentum at an extreme pace. Models trained on the scientific record are generating hypotheses and even running experiments in automated ...
Indications strongly suggest that artificial general intelligence is more than just another product launch; it’s a fundamental shift in the landscape of intelligence. It’s a transition no company can ...
From automated cyberattacks to fears of losing control, new warnings about AI are sounding more alarming than ever.
OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger isn't a fan of AGI or superintelligence. He says he believes in "specialized" AI instead. "What can one human being actually achieve?" he asked. The same goes for AI ...