Really? I view the original title as a very good summary of the overall point of the article and this new title as fairly misleading.
> It can be debated whether arena.ai is a suitable metric for AGI, a strong case can probably be made for why it’s not. However, that’s irrelevant, as the spirit of the self-sacrifice clause is to avoid an arms race, and we are clearly in one.
> Therefore, one can only conclude, that we currently meet the stated example triggering condition of “a better-than-even chance of success in the next two years”. As per its charter, OpenAI should stop competing with the likes of Anthropic and Gemini, and join forces, however that might look like.
The new title is a single, almost throwaway, line from the article.
> While this will never happen, I think it’s illustrative of some great points for pondering:
> The impotence of naive idealism in the face of economic incentives.
The discrepancy between marketing points and practical actions.
The changing goalposts of AGI and timelines. Notably, it’s common to now talk about ASI instead, implying we may have already achieved AGI, almost without noticing.
Really? I view the original title as a very good summary of the overall point of the article and this new title as fairly misleading.
> It can be debated whether arena.ai is a suitable metric for AGI, a strong case can probably be made for why it’s not. However, that’s irrelevant, as the spirit of the self-sacrifice clause is to avoid an arms race, and we are clearly in one.
> Therefore, one can only conclude, that we currently meet the stated example triggering condition of “a better-than-even chance of success in the next two years”. As per its charter, OpenAI should stop competing with the likes of Anthropic and Gemini, and join forces, however that might look like.
The new title is a single, almost throwaway, line from the article.
> While this will never happen, I think it’s illustrative of some great points for pondering:
> The impotence of naive idealism in the face of economic incentives. The discrepancy between marketing points and practical actions. The changing goalposts of AGI and timelines. Notably, it’s common to now talk about ASI instead, implying we may have already achieved AGI, almost without noticing.