
OpenAI releases ChatGPT-5 as AI race heats up
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman claims using the new GPT-5 is like talking to a PhD-level expert in any topic. File photo: Reuters
OpenAI released a keenly awaited new generation of its hallmark ChatGPT on Thursday, touting "significant" advancements in artificial intelligence capabilities as a global race over the technology accelerates.
ChatGPT-5 is rolling out free to all users of the AI tool, which is used by nearly 700 million people weekly, OpenAI said in a briefing with journalists.
Co-founder and chief executive Sam Altman touted this latest iteration as "clearly a model that is generally intelligent."
Altman cautioned that there is still work to be done to achieve the kind of artificial general intelligence (AGI) that thinks the way people do.
"This is not a model that continuously learns as it is deployed from new things it finds, which is something that, to me, feels like it should be part of an AGI," Altman said.
"But the level of capability here is a huge improvement."
Altman said there were "orders of magnitude more gains" to come on the path toward AGI.
"Obviously... you have to invest in compute (power) at an eye watering rate to get that, but we intend to keep doing it."
Tech industry rivals Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Elon Musk's xAI have been pouring billions of dollars into artificial intelligence since the blockbuster launch of the first version of ChatGPT in late 2022.
Chinese startup DeepSeek shook up the AI sector early this year with a model that delivers high performance using less costly chips.
With fierce competition around the world over the technology, Altman said ChatGPT-5 led the pack in coding, writing, health care and much more.
"GPT-3 felt to me like talking to a high school student -- ask a question, maybe you get a right answer, maybe you'll get something crazy," Altman said.
"GPT-4 felt like you're talking to a college student; GPT-5 is the first time that it really feels like talking to a PhD-level expert in any topic."
Altman expects the ability to create software programs on demand – so-called "vibe-coding" – to be a "defining part of the new ChatGPT-5 era."
In a blog post, British AI expert Simon Willison wrote about getting early access to ChatGPT-5.
"My verdict: it's just good at stuff," Willison wrote.
"It doesn't feel like a dramatic leap ahead from other (large language models) but it exudes competence – it rarely messes up, and frequently impresses me."
However Musk wrote on X, formerly Twitter, that his Grok 4 Heavy AI model "was smarter" than ChatGPT-5.
The company this week also released two new AI models that can be downloaded for free and altered by users, to challenge similar offerings by rivals.
The release of "open-weight language models" comes as OpenAI is under pressure to share inner workings of its software in the spirit of its origin as a nonprofit. (AFP)
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