Briefly
- Altman believes that Chatgpt now surpasses every man who has ever lived.
- Altman called this moment a “event horizon” as AI approaches superinteligations.
- Chatgpt now has 800 million weekly users, which Altman said he relies on technology.
Humanity may already enter the early stages of singularity, a point in which AI surpasses human intelligence, said Openi CEO of Sam Altman. In the blog publish Posted on Tuesday, Altman said that humanity had crossed the critical point of the fold – the “horizon of events” – marking the beginning of a new era of digital superintelligence.
“We went through the horizon of the event; the departure began,” he wrote. “Humanity is close to the construction of digital superintelligence, and at least it is much less strange so far than it seems like it should be.”
Altman’s analysis comes at a time when leading developers AI warns that artificial general intelligence could soon move Workers also impair global economy, exceeding the ability to rule and institutions to answer.
AND uniqueness is the theoretical point when artificial intelligence exceeds human intelligence, which leads to fast, unpredictable technological growth and potentially deep changes in society. Horizon events are not a return point, beyond which, in this case, in this case, AI cannot change.
Altman claimed that we were already entering a “gentle uniqueness” – a gradual, administrative transition to strong digital superiority, not a sudden change. The departure has begun, but it remains understandable and useful.
As a proof of this, Altman has pointed out the increase in the popularity of Chatgpt since his public launch of 2022: “Hundreds of millions of people rely on him every day and for increasingly important tasks,” he said.
The numbers support it. In May 2025. Chatgpt had allegedly had 800 million Weekly active users. Despite the current legal battles with authors And the media sales placesas well as calls for break On AI Development, opening does not show signs of slowing down.
Altman emphasized that even slight improvements in technology can bring significant benefits. But a small mismatch, sceling to hundreds of millions of users, could have serious consequences.
In order to get rid of these inconsistencies, he suggested several points, including:
- Ensure that AI systems operate in accordance with the long -term goals of humanity, not just short -term impulses.
- Avoid concentrated control by any person, company or country.
- Start global discussions now about what values and restrictions should lead to the development of a powerful AI.
Altman said they were critical for the development of AI for the next five years.
“2025 saw the arrival of agents who can do real cognitive work; writing a computer code will never be the same,” he said. “2026. They are likely to see the arrival of systems that can understand new insights. 2027. He can see the arrival of robots that can perform tasks in the real world.”
Until 2030, Altman also envisaged intelligence and the ability to generate and act on ideas will be widely available.
“We are already living with incredible digital intelligence, and after some initial shock, most of us are quite used to it,” he said, noting that people quickly move from impressing AI to expectations.
Because the world predicts an increase in artificial general intelligence and uniqueness, Altman believes that the most notable breakthroughs will not feel like revolutions – it will feel usually, and naked minimal AI players have to offer to enter the market.
“This is how the singularity goes: miracles become routine and then the table role,” he said.
Edited Josh Quttner
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