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Why the AI Future Is Unfolding Faster Than Anyone Expected
Why the AI Future Is Unfolding Faster Than Anyone Expected

Bloomberg

time20-05-2025

  • Science
  • Bloomberg

Why the AI Future Is Unfolding Faster Than Anyone Expected

AI is improving more quickly than we realize. The economic and societal impact could be massive. By Brad Stone May 20, 2025 at 8:30 AM EDT Share this article When OpenAI introduced ChatGPT in 2022, people could instantly see that the field of artificial intelligence had dramatically advanced. We all speak a language, after all, and could appreciate how the chatbot answered questions in a fluid, close-to-human style. AI has made immense strides since then, but many of us are—and let me put this delicately—too unsophisticated to notice. Max Tegmark, a professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says our limited ability to gather specialized knowledge makes it much harder for us to recognize the disconcerting pace of improvements in technology. Most people aren't high-level mathematicians and may not know that, just in the past few years, AI's mastery has progressed from high-school-level algebra to ninja-level calculus. Similarly, there are relatively few musical virtuosos in the world, but AI has recently become adept at reading sheet music, understanding musical theory, even creating new music in major genres. 'What a lot of people are underestimating is just how much has happened in a very short amount of time,' Tegmark says. 'Things are going very fast now.' In San Francisco, still for now the center of the AI action, one can track these advances in the waves of new computer learning methods, chatbot features and podcast-propagated buzzwords. In February, OpenAI unveiled a tool called Deep Research that functions like a resourceful colleague, responding to in-depth queries by digging up facts on the web, synthesizing information and generating chart-filled reports. In another major development, both OpenAI and Anthropic—co-founded by Chief Executive Officer Dario Amodei and a breakaway group of former OpenAI engineers—developed tools that let users control whether a chatbot engages in 'reasoning': They can direct it to deliberate over a query for an extended period to arrive at more accurate or thorough answers. Another fashionable trend is called agentic AI —autonomous programs that can (theoretically) perform tasks for a user without supervision, such as sending emails or booking restaurant reservations. Techies are also buzzing about 'vibe coding'—not a new West Coast meditation practice but the art of positing general ideas and letting popular coding assistants like Microsoft Corp.'s GitHub Copilot or Cursor, made by the startup Anysphere Inc., take it from there. As developers blissfully vibe code, there's also been an unmistakable vibe shift in Silicon Valley. Just a year ago, breakthroughs in AI were usually accompanied by furrowed brows and wringing hands, as tech and political leaders fretted about the safety implications. That changed sometime around February, when US Vice President JD Vance, speaking at a global summit in Paris focused on mitigating harms from AI, inveighed against any regulation that might impede progress. 'I'm not here this morning to talk about AI safety,' he said. 'I'm here to talk about AI opportunity.' When Vance and President Donald Trump took office, they dashed any hope of new government rules that might slow the AI juggernauts. On his third day in office, Trump rescinded an executive order from his predecessor, Joe Biden, that set AI safety standards and asked tech companies to submit safety reports for new products. At the same time, AI startups have softened their calls for regulation. In 2023, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told Congress that the possibility AI could run amok and hurt humans was among his ' areas of greatest concern ' and that companies should have to get licenses from the government to operate new models. At the TED Conference in Vancouver this April, he said he no longer favored that approach, because he'd ' learned more about how the government works.' It's not unusual in Silicon Valley to see tech companies and their leaders contort their ideologies to fit the shifting political winds. Still, the intensity over the past few months has been startling to watch. Many tech companies have stopped highlighting existential AI safety concerns, shed employees focused on the issue (along with diversity, sustainability and other Biden-era priorities) and become less apologetic about doing business with militaries at home and abroad, bypassing concerns from staff about placing deadly weapons in the hands of AI. Rob Reich, a professor of political science and senior fellow at the Institute for Human-Centered AI at Stanford University, says 'there's a shift to explicitly talking about American advantage. AI security and sovereignty are the watchwords of the day, and the geopolitical implications of building powerful AI systems are stronger than ever.' If Trump's policies are one reason for the change, another is the emergence of DeepSeek and its talented, enigmatic CEO, Liang Wenfeng. When the Chinese AI startup released its R1 model in the US in January, analysts marveled at the quality of a product from a company that had raised far less capital than its US rivals and was supposedly using data centers with less powerful Nvidia Corp. chips. DeepSeek's chatbot shot to the top of the charts on app stores, and US tech stocks promptly cratered on the possibility that the upstart had figured out a more efficient way to reap AI's gains. The uproar has quieted since then, but Trump has further restricted the sale of powerful American AI chips to China, and Silicon Valley now watches DeepSeek and its Chinese peers with a sense of urgency. 'Everyone has to think very carefully about what is at stake if we cede leadership,' says Alex Kotran, CEO of the AI Education Project. Losing to China isn't the only potential downside, though. AI-generated content is becoming so pervasive online that it could soon sap the web of any practical utility, and the Pentagon is using machine learning to hasten humanity's possible contact with alien life. Let's hope they like us. Nor has this geopolitical footrace calmed the widespread fear of economic damage and job losses. Take just one field: computer programming. Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet Inc., said on an earnings call in April that AI now generates 'well over 30%' of all new code for the company's products. Garry Tan, CEO of startup program Y Combinator, said on a podcast that for a quarter of the startups in his winter program, 95% of their lines of code were AI-generated. MIT's Tegmark, who's also president of an AI safety advocacy organization called the Future of Life Institute, finds solace in his belief that a human instinct for self-preservation will ultimately kick in: Pro-AI business leaders and politicians 'don't want someone to build an AI that will overthrow the government any more than they want plutonium to be legalized.' He remains concerned, though, that the inexorable acceleration of AI development is occurring just outside the visible spectrum of most people on Earth, and that it could have economic and societal consequences beyond our current imagination. 'It sounds like sci-fi,' Tegmark says, 'but I remind you that ChatGPT also sounded like sci-fi as recently as a few years ago.' More from the AI Issue DeepSeek's 'Tech Madman' Founder Is Threatening US Dominance in AI Race The company's sudden emergence illustrates how China's industry is thriving despite Washington's efforts to slow it down. Microsoft's CEO on How AI Will Remake Every Company, Including His Nervous customers and a volatile partnership with OpenAI are complicating things for Satya Nadella and the world's most valuable company. America's Leading Alien Hunters Depend on AI to Speed Their Search Harvard's Galileo Project has brought high-end academic research to a once-fringe pursuit, and the Pentagon is watching. How AI Has Already Changed My Job Workers from different industries talk about the ways they're adapting. Maybe AI Slop Is Killing the Internet, After All The assertion that bots are choking off human life online has never seemed more true. Anthropic Is Trying to Win the AI Race Without Losing Its Soul Dario Amodei has transformed himself from an academic into the CEO of a $61 billion startup. Why Apple Still Hasn't Cracked AI Insiders say continued failure to get artificial intelligence right threatens everything from the iPhone's dominance to plans for robots and other futuristic products. 10 People to Watch in Tech: From AI Startups to Venture Capital A guide to the people you'll be hearing more about in the near future.

Tariff Pullback Shows Trump Isn't Immune to Wall Street After All
Tariff Pullback Shows Trump Isn't Immune to Wall Street After All

Bloomberg

time09-04-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Tariff Pullback Shows Trump Isn't Immune to Wall Street After All

President Donald Trump surprised everyone this afternoon when he pulled back on some of the most severe tariffs announced just a week ago on 'Liberation Day.' Businessweek editor Brad Stone provides some quick analysis. Plus: Mass government firings lead to a loss of expertise, and why everyone is still talking about Netflix's Adolescence. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up.

The Death of Corporate DEI Efforts Is Premature
The Death of Corporate DEI Efforts Is Premature

Bloomberg

time19-03-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

The Death of Corporate DEI Efforts Is Premature

President Donald Trump's rollback of what he calls 'discriminatory equity ideology' started on his first day in office and continues even today, with a memo aimed at the foreign service. Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Brad Stone writes in Remarks for April's issue of the magazine about American companies' widespread withdrawal of efforts to diversify their workforces and leadership. Plus: The US shutdown of an app used by asylum seekers may benefit smugglers, and a discussion of how Elon Musk's businesses are faring. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up.

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