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"we are past the event horizon; the takeoff has started"
webblog.samaltman.com·blog.samaltman.com/the-gentle-singularity
A May 2025 essay by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman offering his personal forecast of near-term AI trajectory; relevant as a high-profile industry leader's public framing of capability timelines and safety stakes, but written as opinion rather than technical analysis.
Metadata
Importance: 62/100blog postprimary source
Summary
Sam Altman argues that humanity has crossed an inflection point in AI development, with superintelligence within reach and the hardest scientific obstacles already overcome. He forecasts rapid capability gains through the late 2020s—agents, novel-insight systems, and physical robots—and suggests that abundant intelligence and energy will fundamentally transform human progress, while daily life may feel more continuous than discontinuous.
Key Points
- •Altman claims the 'least-likely' scientific breakthroughs are behind us; systems like GPT-4 and o3 will scale further without equivalent difficulty.
- •He forecasts a rapid capability timeline: real cognitive agents (2025), novel-insight systems (2026), real-world robots (2027).
- •Abundance of intelligence and energy are framed as the two fundamental limiters on human progress, both about to be removed.
- •AI-accelerated AI research is highlighted as uniquely significant—compressing decades of research into months.
- •Altman acknowledges that small misalignments, multiplied across hundreds of millions of users, can cause substantial harm.
Cited by 2 pages
| Page | Type | Quality |
|---|---|---|
| AGI Timeline | Concept | 59.0 |
| Sam Altman: Track Record | -- | 60.0 |
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We are past the event horizon; the takeoff has started. Humanity is close to building digital superintelligence, and at least so far it’s much less weird than it seems like it should be.
Robots are not yet walking the streets, nor are most of us talking to AI all day. People still die of disease, we still can’t easily go to space, and there is a lot about the universe we don’t understand.
And yet, we have recently built systems that are smarter than people in many ways, and are able to significantly amplify the output of people using them. The least-likely part of the work is behind us; the scientific insights that got us to systems like GPT-4 and o3 were hard-won, but will take us very far.
AI will contribute to the world in many ways, but the gains to quality of life from AI driving faster scientific progress and increased productivity will be enormous; the future can be vastly better than the present. Scientific progress is the biggest driver of overall progress; it’s hugely exciting to think about how much more we could have.
In some big sense, ChatGPT is already more powerful than any human who has ever lived. Hundreds of millions of people rely on it every day and for increasingly important tasks; a small new capability can create a hugely positive impact; a small misalignment multiplied by hundreds of millions of people can cause a great deal of negative impact.
2025 has seen the arrival of agents that can do real cognitive work; writing computer code will never be the same. 2026 will likely see the arrival of systems that can figure out novel insights. 2027 may see the arrival of robots that can do tasks in the real world.
A lot more people will be able to create software, and art. But the world wants a lot more of both, and experts will probably still be much better than novices, as long as they embrace the new tools. Generally speaking, the ability for one person to get much more done in 2030 than they could in 2020 will be a striking change, and one many people will figure out how to benefit from.
In the most important ways, the 2030s may not be wildly different. People will still love their families, express their creativity, play games, and swim in lakes.
But in still-very-important-ways, the 2030s are likely going to be wildly different from any time that has come before. We do not know how far beyond human-level intelligence we can go, but we are about to find out.
In the 2030s, intelligence and energy—ideas, and the ability to make ideas happen—are going to become wildly abundant. These two have been the fundamental limiters on human progress for a long time; with abundant intelligence and energy (and good governance), we can theoretically have anything else.
Already we live with incredible digital intelligence, and after some initial shock, most of us are pretty used to it. Very quickly we go from being amazed that AI can generate a beautifully-written paragraph to wondering when it can generate a beautifully-written no
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