Leaked Documents Show OpenAI Has a Very Clear Definition of ‘AGI’
We finally have a real definition of the elusive "AGI."
By Thomas Maxwell Published December 26, 2024 

OpenAI and Microsoft have a secret definition for “AGI,” an acronym for 
artificial general intelligence, or any system that can outperform humans at 
most tasks. According to leaked documents obtained by The Information, the two 
companies came to agree in 2023 that AGI will be achieved once OpenAI has 
developed an AI system that can generate at least $100 billion in profits.

There has long been a debate in the AI community about what AGI means, or 
whether computers will ever be good enough to outperform humans at most tasks 
and subsequently wipe out major swaths of the economy.

The term “artificial intelligence” is something of a misnomer because much of 
it is just a prediction machine, taking in keywords and searching large amounts 
of data without really understanding the underlying concepts. But OpenAI has 
received more than $13 billion in funding from Microsoft over the years, and 
that money has come with a strange contractual agreement that the startup would 
stop allowing Microsoft to use any new technology it develops after AGI is 
achieved.

OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit under the guise that it would use its 
influence to create products that benefit all of humanity. The idea behind 
cutting off Microsoft once AGI is attained is that unfettered access to OpenAI 
intellectual property could unduly concentrate power in the tech giant. In 
order to incentivize it for investing billions in the nonprofit, which would 
have never gone public, Microsoft’s current agreement with OpenAI entitles it 
and other investors to take a slice of profits until they collect $100 billion. 
The cap is meant to ensure most profit eventually goes back to building 
products that benefit the entirety of humanity. This is all pie-in-the-sky 
thinking since, again, AI is not that powerful at this point.

It has been clear for some time that OpenAI does not care about public benefit, 
and the company has been looking to pivot into a for-profit structure (while 
maintaining its mission to benefit all of humanity, somehow), because the 
current nonprofit structure makes it difficult to raise the gobs of money 
needed to compete. Consequently, The Information says Microsoft and OpenAI have 
been negotiating a host of changes to their arrangement that would go into 
place should the company restructure. Microsoft currently serves as OpenAI’s 
exclusive cloud hosting provider, and OpenAI may want to end that as well as 
stop profit-sharing and switch to simply giving Microsoft equity.

Microsoft and OpenAI have been on diverging paths for some time now. It was 
recently reported that the latter has begun incorporating AI models developed 
in-house into its 365 Copilot product in order to improve cost and efficiency. 
It doesn’t make sense for Microsoft to continue relying on OpenAI, an 
independent company developing similar productivity tools, for technology that 
it believes will be the backbone of its productivity software going forward. 
Especially with all the chaos and drama that has surrounded OpenAI. That is 
probably why it is not continuing to fund OpenAI. Microsoft needs its own 
proprietary tech to chart its own path.

OpenAI is far away from achieving that $100 billion in profit milestone—it is 
expected to generate $4 billion in revenue for 2024— on technology whose true 
value remains speculative, which means under the current arrangement it would 
likely have to keep handing its technology and profits over to Microsoft for a 
long time. That is not great as they head towards becoming competitors and 
OpenAI seeks new investors. Getting rid of the cloud hosting tie-up could also 
allow OpenAI to negotiate better hosting costs with an alternative provider, 
something Google has told the FTC in a letter imploring it to nullify the 
agreement.

Elon Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI and former board member, has been suing to 
try and stop the company from converting into a for-profit entity. He has 
argued, among other things, that he invested roughly $50 million into the 
company in its early days believing it would be a non-profit in perpetuity, and 
now feels deceived. He has also complained in court that OpenAI pays exorbitant 
salaries in a way that is intended to thwart rivals and therefore 
anti-competitive. Because Musk has launched his own competing AI startup, xAI, 
skeptics think his lawsuit is a thinly veiled attempt at slowing down OpenAI’s 
growth.


<https://gizmodo.com/leaked-documents-show-openai-has-a-very-clear-definition-of-agi-2000543339>

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