logo
What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready

What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready

Time of India6 hours ago
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns that Artificial Super-intelligence (ASI) could surpass collective human intelligence within six years. Speaking on the Special Competitive Studies Project podcast, Schmidt said society is vastly unprepared for this shift. He called ASI 'underhyped,' citing how current AI systems already outperform humans in programming and reasoning through recursive self-improvement.
Eric Schmidt predicts AI will soon replace most programmers and surpass human intelligence. On a recent podcast, he described the near-future rise of Artificial Super Intelligence (machines smarter than all of humanity combined) as both imminent and underestimated.
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
"Within a year, programmers may be obsolete"
AGI in five years, ASI in six? The 'San Francisco Consensus'
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
'There's no language for what's coming'
The path ahead: revolutionary or ruinous?
In a world consumed by conversations around AI ethics , job losses, and automation, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt is raising an alarm—not about what we already know, but about what we don't yet understand. On a recent episode of the Special Competitive Studies Project podcast, Schmidt declared that Artificial Super-intelligence (ASI)—a term that's still absent in most public discourse—is rapidly approaching, and society is dangerously unprepared.Speaking with conviction and urgency, Schmidt laid out a roadmap that reads more like science fiction than emerging reality. Within the next 12 months, he believes, most programming jobs could be replaced by AI. Not only that, AI systems will be able to outpace the brightest graduate-level mathematicians in structured reasoning tasks like advanced math and coding.At the core of this shift is what he calls recursive self-improvement—AI systems that write their own code using protocols like Lean, making them exponentially more efficient with each iteration. As Schmidt explained: 'Ten to twenty percent of the code in research labs like OpenAI and Anthropic is now being written by AI itself.'Schmidt anticipates that within three to five years, the tech world will cross the threshold of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)—a system that can match human creativity and reasoning across disciplines. But it's what comes next that he finds truly staggering.He refers to ASI, or Artificial Super-intelligence, as a leap beyond individual human intellect—something that could soon exceed the collective intelligence of all humans. 'This occurs within six years, just based on scaling,' he said, citing a growing consensus among Silicon Valley's top thinkers—what he terms the 'San Francisco Consensus.'Yet, unlike most headlines that exaggerate the risks of AI, Schmidt's stance is paradoxically sobering because it highlights how little attention this seismic shift is receiving.Despite ASI being potentially the most transformative force in human history, Schmidt believes it is severely under-discussed. 'People do not understand what happens when you have intelligence at this level, which is largely free,' he said. The worry, for Schmidt, isn't just about what AI can do—but about how unprepared our legal, ethical, and governance systems are to accommodate it.'There's no language for what happens with the arrival of this,' Schmidt warned. 'This is happening faster than our society, our democracy, our laws will interact.'As AI continues its meteoric rise, the predictions made by Eric Schmidt pose a dual challenge. On one hand, humanity stands on the brink of a new technological renaissance; on the other, we risk spiraling into uncharted waters without a map.'Super Intelligence isn't a question of if, but when,' Schmidt seems to say—and the fact that we're not talking about it enough may be the biggest threat of all.Whether or not society is ready, Artificial Superintelligence is no longer a distant theory. According to one of tech's most influential figures, it's knocking at our door. And if we don't start preparing, we might not be the ones answering.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Google Offers Free Battery Replacements For Pixel Phones. Check If You Are Eligible
Google Offers Free Battery Replacements For Pixel Phones. Check If You Are Eligible

NDTV

time2 hours ago

  • NDTV

Google Offers Free Battery Replacements For Pixel Phones. Check If You Are Eligible

Google is offering a free battery replacement or a compensation of $100 (Rs 8,500) for Pixel 6a users, including in India, experiencing battery drain and overheating issues. The company will also implement a mandatory Android 16 update to all Pixel 6a devices to improve battery efficiency and reduce overheating risks, with rollout starting July 8, 2025. "The battery replacement program provides one battery replacement at no charge for eligible Pixel 6a devices following an initial eligibility check and physical inspection of your device," said Google. Who is eligible and how to check eligibility? All eligible Pixel 6a users can get their batteries replaced for free at authorised service centres. The users can opt for a cash payout of Rs8,500 via Payoneer or $150 (Rs12,700) in Google Store credit. Google said that the battery replacement will be available starting July 21, 2025, at walk-in repair centres in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Singapore, Japan, and India. Via mail-in repair service, it will be available for customers in the US and India. Additional battery replacement capability is expected in Japan, France, some other parts of Europe, and Australia soon. Follow these three steps to check eligibility: Step 1: Visit Google's dedicated eligibility checker page Step 2: Enter your device's IMEI number Step 3: Submit the email ID linked to the device What are the conditions? Google clarified that devices with liquid damage or significant physical damage may not qualify for the free battery service. Out-of-warranty issues like broken screens may incur a service fee. "Before we start any repairs, we'll provide a cost estimate. You then have the option to proceed with the repair or have your device returned to you," noted Google. "Payments will be converted to your local currency and the final amount will be calculated using the exchange rate in effect at the time you select your support option," it added.

Digital rules? Not EU's way
Digital rules? Not EU's way

Economic Times

time4 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Digital rules? Not EU's way

Digital Rules? Not EU's Way Madrid: In 2024, Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) released a draft ex-ante digital competition law, following the lead of the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA). But does India need a new law that is an inspiration from a dubious DMA or is existing competition law enough?India's Competition Act 2002-especially in the wake of significant amendments made in 2023-offers a flexible and comprehensive framework to address anticompetitive conduct in the digital economy. It also includes sections that cover such core digital concerns as deep discounting, bundling, self-preferencing, exclusive tie-ups and the misuse of data by dominant platforms- without automatically prejudging whether such conduct is anti-competitive. CCI has also demonstrated that it can apply these provisions, as it did when it imposed penalties on Google for anticompetitive conduct in the Android ecosystem and Play Store policies. More recently, Meta and WhatsApp were fined for unfair data-sharing conditions imposed on users. CCI's scrutiny of MakeMyTrip, Flipkart and Uber demonstrates its ability to engage with platform-specific issues under existing legal mandate. While some jurisdictions have opted for 'ex-ante' digital competition laws-such as DMA-India would be wise to avoid this path. Ex-ante regimes often rely on absolute prohibitions and structural presumptions, which may inadvertently suppress innovative or pro-competitive conduct because it involves scale or the blueprint for many ex-ante digital competition rules, has been criticised by competition experts like OECD's Frederic Jenny for rigidity and potential to hinder innovation in fast-moving markets. Indeed, DMA has produced dubious outcomes in the has taken note. The draft Digital Competition Bill (DCB) 2024 proposed ex-ante obligations for 'systemically significant digital enterprises', drawing inspiration from foreign frameworks like DMA. But it was met with concern from industry and legal experts, who warned that such sweeping, pre-emptive rules risked stifling innovation and overregulating a still-developing digital economy. That proposal was put on the backburner, a prudent pause that underscores the need to pursue a tailored, evidence-based approach rather than adopt a one-size-fits-all regulatory model. Indeed, India's experience offers an alternative. In the landmark v. Google case, CCI displayed regulatory restraint, carefully weighing the need to preserve innovation. That decision reflected a more sophisticated understanding of digital markets, where conduct must be judged in context, rather than employing broad regulatory prohibitions that ignore efficiencies and procompetitive benefits. Furthermore, CCI has shown flexibility in defining relevant markets in digital cases, such as in Snapdeal and Meru v. Uber, where evolving business models required novel interpretations. Despite effectiveness of this legal framework, enforcement delays remain a significant concern. In CCI v. SAIL case, the Supreme Court highlighted the need for time-bound proceedings to ensure meaningful remedies and deterrence. The ability to enforce the law swiftly and decisively is what will ultimately determine the regime's than replicating foreign models, India should prioritise improving how its current system functions. This means faster case resolution, better resources for CCI and development of sector-specific guidelines that retain flexibility while offering clarity. Moreover, continuous training and upskilling of enforcement personnel are essential. That's why the proposed Digital Markets and Data Unit within CCI is a welcome development, as it promises to bring much-needed technical expertise and sector-specific knowledge to bear on increasingly complex pace of technological change in the digital economy exceeds the ability of prescriptive rules to remain relevant. A principles-based, evidence-driven regulatory approach-such as the one embodied in the Competition Act-is far better suited to this 2023 amendments bolstered this framework by introducing a deal value threshold for merger scrutiny, a voluntary settlement and commitment mechanism, and significantly higher penalties. Together, these amendments serve to equip CCI with modern tools to regulate proactively without becoming focus should now shift to building institutional capacity, streamlining procedures and ensuring timely enforcement. These improvements will ensure that Indian markets remain healthy, efficient and a global climate of regulatory overreach, India's approach should continue to remain principled and pragmatic: grounded in a refusal to legislate prematurely and a commitment to strengthen an already sound framework rooted in economic analysis that has served it well across sectors as varied as telecom, cement, pharmaceuticals and aviation. It should be no different for digital markets. (Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Inside TechM CEO's 'baptism by fire' and the blaze he still needs to douse Can this cola maker get back bubble valuation pricked by Ambani? Delhivery survived the Meesho curveball. Can it keep on delivering profits? Why the RBI's stability report must go beyond rituals and routines Are Sebi's MII evaluations driving real change or just more paperwork? From takeovers to a makeover: Are cement stocks ready for re-rating? 8 cement stocks with upside potential from 6 to 42% Stock picks of the week: 5 stocks with consistent score improvement and return potential of more than 29% in 1 year For long-term investors with ability to ignore short-term volatility: 6 mid-caps from different sectors with upside potential of up to 39%

What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready
What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready

Time of India

time6 hours ago

  • Time of India

What is Artificial Super-intelligence? Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns AI will soon outsmart humanity and we are not ready

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warns that Artificial Super-intelligence (ASI) could surpass collective human intelligence within six years. Speaking on the Special Competitive Studies Project podcast, Schmidt said society is vastly unprepared for this shift. He called ASI 'underhyped,' citing how current AI systems already outperform humans in programming and reasoning through recursive self-improvement. Eric Schmidt predicts AI will soon replace most programmers and surpass human intelligence. On a recent podcast, he described the near-future rise of Artificial Super Intelligence (machines smarter than all of humanity combined) as both imminent and underestimated. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads "Within a year, programmers may be obsolete" AGI in five years, ASI in six? The 'San Francisco Consensus' Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads 'There's no language for what's coming' The path ahead: revolutionary or ruinous? In a world consumed by conversations around AI ethics , job losses, and automation, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt is raising an alarm—not about what we already know, but about what we don't yet understand. On a recent episode of the Special Competitive Studies Project podcast, Schmidt declared that Artificial Super-intelligence (ASI)—a term that's still absent in most public discourse—is rapidly approaching, and society is dangerously with conviction and urgency, Schmidt laid out a roadmap that reads more like science fiction than emerging reality. Within the next 12 months, he believes, most programming jobs could be replaced by AI. Not only that, AI systems will be able to outpace the brightest graduate-level mathematicians in structured reasoning tasks like advanced math and the core of this shift is what he calls recursive self-improvement—AI systems that write their own code using protocols like Lean, making them exponentially more efficient with each iteration. As Schmidt explained: 'Ten to twenty percent of the code in research labs like OpenAI and Anthropic is now being written by AI itself.'Schmidt anticipates that within three to five years, the tech world will cross the threshold of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)—a system that can match human creativity and reasoning across disciplines. But it's what comes next that he finds truly refers to ASI, or Artificial Super-intelligence, as a leap beyond individual human intellect—something that could soon exceed the collective intelligence of all humans. 'This occurs within six years, just based on scaling,' he said, citing a growing consensus among Silicon Valley's top thinkers—what he terms the 'San Francisco Consensus.'Yet, unlike most headlines that exaggerate the risks of AI, Schmidt's stance is paradoxically sobering because it highlights how little attention this seismic shift is ASI being potentially the most transformative force in human history, Schmidt believes it is severely under-discussed. 'People do not understand what happens when you have intelligence at this level, which is largely free,' he said. The worry, for Schmidt, isn't just about what AI can do—but about how unprepared our legal, ethical, and governance systems are to accommodate it.'There's no language for what happens with the arrival of this,' Schmidt warned. 'This is happening faster than our society, our democracy, our laws will interact.'As AI continues its meteoric rise, the predictions made by Eric Schmidt pose a dual challenge. On one hand, humanity stands on the brink of a new technological renaissance; on the other, we risk spiraling into uncharted waters without a map.'Super Intelligence isn't a question of if, but when,' Schmidt seems to say—and the fact that we're not talking about it enough may be the biggest threat of or not society is ready, Artificial Superintelligence is no longer a distant theory. According to one of tech's most influential figures, it's knocking at our door. And if we don't start preparing, we might not be the ones answering.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store