Context: he polled a room of students asking who thinks they’re smarter than GPT-4 and most raised their hands. Then he asked the same question for GPT-5 and apparently only two students raised their hands. He also said “and those two people that said smarter than GPT-5, I’d like to hear back from you in a little bit of time.”
Sam Altman’s power, money, and status all rely on people believing that GPT-(T+1) is going to be smarter than them. Altman doesn’t have good track record of being honest and sincere when it comes to protecting his power, money, and status.
If there’s no constraints on when they have to name a system “GPT-5”, they can make the statement true by only naming a system “GPT-5″ if it is smart enough. (cf. Not Technically a Lie)
Edit: though “and those two [...] I’d like to hear back from you in a little bit of time” implies a system named GPT-5 will be released ‘in a little bit of time’
This really depends on the definition of “smarter”. There is a valid sense in which Stockfish is “smarter” than any human. Likewise, there are many valid senses in which GPT-4 is “smarter” than some humans, and some valid senses in which GPT-4 is “smarter” than all humans (e. g., at token prediction). There will be senses in which GPT-5 will be “smarter” than a bigger fraction of humans compared to GPT-4, perhaps being smarter than Sam Altman under a bigger set of possible definitions of “smarter”.
Will that actually mean anything? Who knows.
By playing with definitions like this, Sam Altman can simultaneously inspire hype by implication (“GPT-5 will be a superintelligent AGI!!!”) and then, if GPT-5 underdelivers, avoid significant reputational losses by assigning a different meaning to his past words (“here’s a very specific sense in which GPT-5 is smarter than me, that’s what I meant, hype is out of control again, smh”). This is a classic tactic; basically a motte-and-bailey variant.
“I don’t think I’m going to be smarter than GPT-5”—Sam Altman
Context: he polled a room of students asking who thinks they’re smarter than GPT-4 and most raised their hands. Then he asked the same question for GPT-5 and apparently only two students raised their hands. He also said “and those two people that said smarter than GPT-5, I’d like to hear back from you in a little bit of time.”
The full talk can be found here. (the clip is at 13:45)
How are you interpreting this fact?
Sam Altman’s power, money, and status all rely on people believing that GPT-(T+1) is going to be smarter than them. Altman doesn’t have good track record of being honest and sincere when it comes to protecting his power, money, and status.
Though, future sama’s power, money, and status all rely on GPT-(T+1) actually being smarter than them.
I wonder how he’s balancing short-term and long-term interests
If there’s no constraints on when they have to name a system “GPT-5”, they can make the statement true by only naming a system “GPT-5″ if it is smart enough. (cf. Not Technically a Lie)
Edit: though “and those two [...] I’d like to hear back from you in a little bit of time” implies a system named GPT-5 will be released ‘in a little bit of time’
Edit 2: “Internally we’ve gone all the way to about a maybe like a 4.5”
This really depends on the definition of “smarter”. There is a valid sense in which Stockfish is “smarter” than any human. Likewise, there are many valid senses in which GPT-4 is “smarter” than some humans, and some valid senses in which GPT-4 is “smarter” than all humans (e. g., at token prediction). There will be senses in which GPT-5 will be “smarter” than a bigger fraction of humans compared to GPT-4, perhaps being smarter than Sam Altman under a bigger set of possible definitions of “smarter”.
Will that actually mean anything? Who knows.
By playing with definitions like this, Sam Altman can simultaneously inspire hype by implication (“GPT-5 will be a superintelligent AGI!!!”) and then, if GPT-5 underdelivers, avoid significant reputational losses by assigning a different meaning to his past words (“here’s a very specific sense in which GPT-5 is smarter than me, that’s what I meant, hype is out of control again, smh”). This is a classic tactic; basically a motte-and-bailey variant.