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Discussion Sentiment

69% Positive

Analyzed from 9212 words in the discussion.

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#openai#agi#microsoft#https#more#com#don#azure#still#models

Discussion (418 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

wg023 minutes ago
A wise man from Google said in an internal memo to the tune of: "We do not have any moat neither does anyone else."

Deepseek v4 is good enough, really really good given the price it is offered at.

PS: Just to be clear - even the most expensive AI models are unreliable, would make stupid mistakes and their code output MUST be reviewed carefully so Deepseek v4 is not any different either, it too is just a random token generator based on token frequency distributions with no real thought process like all other models such as Claude Opus etc.

didip20 minutes ago
I agree. Data and userbase are still the moats.

Once a new model or a technique is invented, it’s just a matter of time until it becomes a free importable library.

dominotw12 minutes ago
dont they have the moat of being able to test their models on billions of ppl and gather feedback.
kevin_thibedeau17 minutes ago
Can Deepseek answer probing questions about Winnie the Pooh?
harvey91 minute ago
Is it subject to CCP censorship? Maybe.
thanhhaimaiabout 2 hours ago
Opinions are my own.

I think the biggest winner of this might be Google. Virtually all the frontier AI labs use TPU. The only one that doesn't use TPU is OpenAI due to the exclusive deal with Microsoft. Given the newly launched Gen 8 TPU this month, it's likely OpenAI will contemplate using TPU too.

bastawhizabout 1 hour ago
Many labs use TPUs, but not exclusively. Most labs need more compute than they can get, and if there's TPU capacity, they'll adapt their systems to be able to run partially on TPUs.
maxclarkabout 2 hours ago
And almost by happenstance Apple. Turns out they have a great platform for inference and torched almost nothing comparatively on Siri. The Apple/Gemini deal is interesting, Google continues to demonstrate their willingness to degrade their experience on Apple to try and force people to switch.
GorbachevyChaseabout 1 hour ago
They also degrade their own direct services with little warning or thought put into change management, so, to be fair, Apple may be getting the same quality of service as the rest of us.
bigyabaiabout 2 hours ago
Apple is basically in the same boat as AMD and Intel. They have a weak, raster-focused GPU architecture that doesn't scale to 100B+ inference workloads and especially struggles with large context prefill. TPUs smoke them on inference, and Nvidia hardware is far-and-away more efficient for training.
brcmthrowawayabout 1 hour ago
This doesn't get talked about enough - the GPU is weak, weak, weak. And anyone who can fix them will go to a serious AI company (for 2-3x the salary).
philipptaabout 1 hour ago
In the recent Dwarkesh Podcast episode Jensen Huang (Nvidia) said that virtually nobody but Anthropic uses TPUs. How does that add up?
csunoser40 minutes ago
I am not sure what context Jensen said that. But midjourney uses tpu. Apple uses tpu. They are no other frontier labs that use it, but Google + Anthropic is 2 out of 3 frontier lab so.....

You could reasonably say that "A majority of frontier labs uses TPU to train and serve their model."

sarchertech44 minutes ago
Who is the other frontier lab other than Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google? I thought they were ahead of everyone else.
DeathArrow26 minutes ago
Folks who make Deepseek, Qwen, GLM, MiniMax, Kimi and MiMo.
VirusNewbieabout 2 hours ago
OpenAI uses GCP. I don't know if they use TPUs.

https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/openai-taps...

PKopabout 1 hour ago
> Opinions are my own.

Why does this need to be stated? Who else's would they be?

edit: he puts this on so many comments lol c'mon this is absurd.

Just add it to your profile once, no one assumes individuals speak for their employers here that would be stupid. The need to add disclaimer would be for the uncommon case that you were speaking for them. It's an anonymous message board we're all just taking here it's not that serious.

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...

ehntoabout 1 hour ago
Some on this forum will be working for companies with conflicts of interest on the topic, and if an employees words were construed to be the opinions of the company that could be bad for that person.
sillysaurusx22 minutes ago
I was once almost fired for saying a little too much in an HN comment about pentesting. Being dragged into an office and given a dressing-down for posting was quite traumatic.

The central issue (or so they claimed) was that people might misconstrue my comment as representing the company I was at.

So yeah, I don’t understand why people are making fun of this. It’s serious.

On the other hand, they were so uptight that I’m not sure “opinions are my own” would have prevented it. But it would have been at least some defense.

jedbergabout 1 hour ago
> Who's else would they be?

Their employer? They may work at related company, and are required to say this.

abosley34 minutes ago
The tech companies train their employees to say this in their social media guidance and training.
operatingthetanabout 1 hour ago
At this point that phase is an attempt at status signaling.
sghiassyabout 1 hour ago
Opinions are my own

But I think you’re right

muyuu42 minutes ago
it's hilarious though

it's like people are LARPing a Fortune company CEO when they're giving their hot takes on social media

reminds me of Trump ending his wild takes on social media with "thank you for your attention to this matter" - so out of place, it makes it really funny

*typo

xboxnolifes38 minutes ago
Its to cover their ass in the event someone makes a stink and quotes them as if its a company opinion.
bastardoperator26 minutes ago
You think the company that just gave 40B to Anthropic is the winner? Interesting.
MattRix20 minutes ago
That deal is a win-win for Google. If they develop a better coding model than Anthropic and beat them at coding, then they win. If they don’t, they still win by making a ton of money from Anthropic long term.
u_fucking_dork23 minutes ago
You think the company that just gave 40B to Anthropic isn’t the winner? Interesting.
bastardoperator14 minutes ago
Was Microsoft the winner based on their 50B investment in OpenAI?
gurjeet5 minutes ago
Related: GitHub has paused new signups for Copilot.

> Starting April 20, 2026, new sign-ups for Copilot Pro, Copilot Pro+, and student plans are temporarily paused.

From: https://docs.github.com/en/copilot/concepts/billing/billing-...

concindsabout 5 hours ago
Am I crazy, or was this press release fully rewritten in the past 10 minutes? The current version is around half the length of the old one, which did not frame it as a "simplification" "grounded in flexibility" but as a deeper partnership. It also had word salad about AGI, and said Azure retained exclusivity for API products but not other products, which the new statement seems to contradict.

What was I looking at?

einsteinx2about 4 hours ago
I noticed the exact same thing. I read the original, went back to read it again and it’s completely changed.
3formabout 3 hours ago
I think a stickied comment about this would be due. No idea if it's possible to call in @dang via at-name?
einsteinx2about 3 hours ago
Looks like they changed the post link to a Bloomberg article instead but kept the comments thread. So I guess he’s already aware.
kergonathabout 1 hour ago
> No idea if it's possible to call in @dang via at-name?

No. Email hn@ycombinator.com

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsfaq.html

alansaberabout 2 hours ago
The in-house or the marketing team swooped in last minute it appears
antonkochubeyabout 4 hours ago
They forgot the "hey ChatGPT, rewrite this to have better impact on the company stock" before submitting it
_jababout 5 hours ago
This agreement feels so friendly towards OpenAI that it's not obvious to me why Microsoft accepted this. I guess Microsoft just realized that the previous agreement was kneecapping OpenAI so much that the investment was at risk, especially with serious competition now coming from Anthropic?
DanielHBabout 4 hours ago
Microsoft is a major shareholder of OpenAI, they don't want their investment to go to 0. You don't just take a loss on a multiple-digit billion investment.
snowwrestlerabout 3 hours ago
I think you’re right about this deal. But it’s kind of funny to think back and realize that Microsoft actually has just written off multi-billion-dollar deals, several times in fact.
nacozarinaabout 3 hours ago
One (1) year after M$ bought Nokia they wrote it off for $7.6 Billion.

There’s no upper limit to their financial stupidity.

dkrichabout 5 hours ago
Probably more that they are compute constrained. In his latest post Ben Thompson talks about how Microsoft had to use their own infrastructure and supplant outside users in the process so this is probably to free up compute.
dinosorabout 5 hours ago
> Microsoft will no longer pay a revenue share to OpenAI.

I feel this looks like a nice thing to have given they remain the primary cloud provider. If Azure improves it's overall quality then I don't see why this ends up as a money printing press as long as OpenAI brings good models?

JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
OpenAI was also threatening to accuse "Microsoft of anticompetitive behavior during their partnership," an "effort [which] could involve seeking federal regulatory review of the terms of the contract for potential violations of antitrust law, as well as a public campaign" [1].

[1] https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/openai-and-microsoft-tensions-ar...

someguyiguessabout 5 hours ago
Pot? Meet Kettle.
aurareturnabout 5 hours ago
Does this mean Microsoft gets OpenAI's models for "free" without having to pay them a dime until 2032?

And on top of that, OpenAI still has to pay Microsoft a share of their revenue made on AWS/Google/anywhere until 2030?

And Microsoft owns 27% of OpenAI, period?

That's a damn good deal for Microsoft. Likely the investment that will keep Microsoft's stock relevant for years.

dzongaabout 3 hours ago
own 27%. but are entitled to OpenAI profits of 49% for eternity (if OpenAI is profitable or government steps in)
lokarabout 5 hours ago
Does anyone expect azure quality to improve? Has it improved at all in the last 3 years? Does leadership at MS think it needs to improve?

I doubt it

gchamonliveabout 3 hours ago
No and at this point tying yourself to azure is a strategic passive and anyone making such decisions should be held responsible for any service outage or degradation.
alternatexabout 3 hours ago
MS incentivizes feature quantity, and the leadership are employees like any other. Product improvements are not on the table unless the company starts promoting people based on it. Doesn't look this will start happening any time soon.
jakeydusabout 4 hours ago
Don’t worry I’m sure there’s a few products without copilot integration still. They’ll get to them before too long.
HWR_14about 3 hours ago
This is probably a delayed outgrowth of the negotiations last year, where Microsoft started trading weird revenue shares and exclusivity for 27% of the company.
guluarteabout 3 hours ago
I think MS wants OpenAI to fail so it can absorb it
Orasabout 3 hours ago
MS put 10B for 50% if I remember correctly. OpenAI is worth many multiples of that.
marricksabout 3 hours ago
> OpenAI is worth many multiples of that

valued at --which I'd say is a reasonable distinction to make right about now

HWR_14about 2 hours ago
When they put 10B in, they got weird tiered revenue shares and other rights. That has been simplified to 27% of OpenAI today. I don't know what that meant their 10B would be worth before dilution in later rounds.
bmitcabout 3 hours ago
> OpenAI is worth many multiples of that.

How?

synergy20about 1 hour ago
Microsoft won the first around, now it's lagging far behind. CEO needs to go, it's so hard to ruin a play this badly.
ethbr129 minutes ago
Ah, so a familiar position for them, then!
dominotw10 minutes ago
what could ceo have done
chasd00about 4 hours ago
This gives OpenAI the ability to goto AWS instead of exclusively on Azure. I guess Azure really is hanging on by a thread.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47616242

elpakalabout 1 hour ago
xvilkaabout 4 hours ago
And Azure still doesn't support IPv6, looking at the GitHub[1].

[1] https://github.com/orgs/community/discussions/10539

jablabout 4 hours ago
Perhaps they should use OpenAI models to figure out how to rollout IPv6.
brazukadev28 minutes ago
Now they can use Claude Code.
WorldMakerabout 4 hours ago
I was under the impression that as long as GitHub doesn't support IPv6 it is a sign that they still haven't finished their migration to Azure. Azure supports IPv6 just fine.
deprabout 2 hours ago
Supports IPv6 just fine? Absolutely not, they have the worst IPv6 implementation of the 3 large clouds, where many of their products don't support it, such as their Postgres offering. See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44881803 for more.
happyPersonRabout 4 hours ago
lol GitHub doesn’t run on azure at msft

They still run their own platform.

Andrexabout 3 hours ago
Github CEO threatened the entire stack was in the process of migrating to Azure.

https://thenewstack.io/github-will-prioritize-migrating-to-a...

ZeWakaabout 1 hour ago
I talked to github devs last week in person, when a lot of the AzDo team was brought over years ago the migration started happening.
awestrokeabout 4 hours ago
Well, you see, they just can't find a checkbox for ipv6 support in the IIS GUI on their ingress servers.
Donaldabout 4 hours ago
Isn't this expected if OpenAI models are going to be listed on AWS GovCloud as a part of the Anthropic / Hegseth fall-out?
torginusabout 3 hours ago
What? I thought Azure will always have the Sharepoint/Office/Active Directory cash cow.
isk517about 3 hours ago
Their engineers have been working tirelessly to make Sharepoint/Office/Active Directory as terrible as it possibly could be while still technically being functional, while continuing to raise prices on them. I've seen many small business start to chose Google Workspace over them, the cracks have formed and are large enough that they are no longer in a position were every business just go with Office because that's what everyone uses.
hirako200021 minutes ago
I see more businesses on the office + Team stack then Google workspace. So far more.

I think the differentiator is Team, which Google for some mysterious reason can't build or doesn't want to.

ethbr17 minutes ago
Sharepoint has never not been terrible.
freediddyabout 4 hours ago
Nadella had OpenAI by the short and curlies early on. But all I've seen from him in the last couple of years is continuously acquiescing to OpenAI's demands. I wonder why he's so weak and doesn't exert more control over the situation? At one point Microsoft owned 49% of OpenAI but now it's down to 27%?
dijitabout 4 hours ago
Everything is personal preference, and perhaps I am more fiscally conservative because I grew up in poverty.

But if I own 49% of a company and that company has more hype than product, hasn't found its market yet but is valued at trillions?

I'm going to sell percentages of that to build my war chest for things that actually hit my bottom line.

The "moonshot" has for all intents and purposes been achieved based on the valuation, and at that valuation: OpenAI has to completely crush all competition... basically just to meet its current valuations.

It would be a really fiscally irresponsible move not to hedge your bets.

Not that it matters but we did something similar with the donated bitcoin on my project. When bitcoin hit a "new record high" we sold half. Then held the remainder until it hit a "new record high" again.

Sure, we could have 'maxxed profit!'; but ultimately it did its job, it was an effective donation/investment that had reasonably maximal returns.

(that said, I do not believe in crypto as an investment opportunity, it's merely the hand I was dealt by it being donated).

freediddyabout 4 hours ago
Microsoft didn't sell anything. OpenAI created more shares and sold those to investors, so Microsoft's stake is getting diluted.

And Microsoft only paid $10B for that stake for the most recognizable name brand for AI around the world. They don't need to "hedge their bets" it's already a humongous win.

Why let Altman continue to call the shots and decrease Microsoft's ownership stake and ability to dictate how OpenAI helps Microsoft and not the other way around?

zozbot234about 4 hours ago
> They don't need to "hedge their bets" it's already a humongous win.

That's a flawed argument. Why wouldn't you want to hedge a risky bet, and one that's even quite highly correlated to Microsoft's own industry sector?

theplatmanabout 3 hours ago
do we know whether Microsoft could have been selling secondary shares as part of various funding rounds?

my impression is that many of these "investments" are structured IOUs for circular deals based on compute resources in exchange for LLM usage

tonyedgecombeabout 4 hours ago
About the same as they wasted on Nokia.
GardenLetter2732 minutes ago
It's not hype, the demand for inference has grown more this year than expected.
saaaaaamabout 3 hours ago
I don’t understand the “record high” point. How did you decide when a “record high” had been reached in a volatile market? Because at $1 the record high might be $2 until it reaches $3 a week or month later. How did you determine where to slice on “record highs”?

Genuine question because I feel like I’m maybe missing something!

dijitabout 2 hours ago
The short answer is: it's the secretary problem.

The longer answer is; you never know whats coming next, bitcoin could have doubled the day after, and doubled the day after that, and so on, for weeks. And by selling half you've effectively sacrificed huge sums of money.

The truth is that by retaining half you have minimised potential losses and sacrificed potential gains, you've chosen a middle position which is more stable.

So, if bitcoin 1000 bitcoing which was word $5 one day, and $7 the next, but suddenly it hits $30. Well, we'd sell half.

If the day after it hit $60, then our 500 remaining bitcoins is worth the same as what we sold, so in theory all we lost was potential gains, we didn't lose any actual value.

Of course, we wouldn't sell we'd hold, and it would probably fall down to $15 or something instead.. then the cycle begins again..

senordevnycabout 2 hours ago
It’s not more hype than product, it has found a market (making many billions in revenue), and it’s not valued at trillions. So wrong on all counts.
solumunusabout 4 hours ago
They haven’t sold anything they’ve been diluted.
hirako200015 minutes ago
A company can dilute just like that?
gessha39 minutes ago
If Sam continues doing Sam things, MS might get 0% of OpenAI if Satya insists on the previous contract. Either by closing up OpenAI and opening up OpaenAI and/or by MS suing it out of existence. It’s all about what MS can get out of it. If they can get 27% of something rather than nothing, they’re better off.
tyreabout 1 hour ago
They had to negotiate away the non-profit structure of OpenAI. Sam used that as a marketing and recruiting tool, but it had outlived that and was only a problem from then on.

For OAI to be a purely capitalist venture, they had to rip that out. But since the non-profit owned control of the company, it had to get something for giving up those rights. This led to a huge negotiation and MSFT ended up with 27% of a company that doesn’t get kneecapped by an ethical board.

In reality, though, the board of both the non-profit and the for profit are nearly identical and beholden to Sam, post–failed coup.

PunchyHamsterabout 4 hours ago
Why would they acquire more when company is still not making profit ? To be left with bigger bag ?
ZeroCool2uabout 5 hours ago
Interesting side effect of this is that Google Cloud may now be the only hype scaler that can resell all 3 of the labs models? Maybe I'm misinterpreting this, but that would be a notable development, and I don't see why Google would allow Gemini to be resold through any of the other cloud providers.

Might really increase the utility of those GCP credits.

aurareturnabout 5 hours ago
Might not be good for Gemini long term if Anthropic and OpenAI can and will sell in every cloud provider they can find but businesses can only use Gemini via Google Cloud.
jfosterabout 5 hours ago
Good for Google Cloud, bad for Gemini = ??? for Google
Melatonicabout 2 hours ago
Except Gemini might end up being far cheaper per token due to the infrastructure advantage
aurareturnabout 2 hours ago
Do we have proof that it's cheaper in terms of $/token/intelligence?
stavrosabout 5 hours ago
How is it good for Gemini that it's not available on two out of three major cloud platforms?
aurareturnabout 5 hours ago
It isn't. That's why I said "might not be good for Gemini".
gowldabout 3 hours ago
"hype scaler" indeed!
retinarosabout 5 hours ago
that will likely mean the end of gemini models...
1f60cabout 4 hours ago
Wait, I thought OpenAI had to pay Microsoft until AGI was achieved or something? Am I misremembering? Is that a different thing?
ksherlockabout 4 hours ago
Per WSJ, previously, they both had revenue sharing agreements. MSFT will no longer send any revenue to OpenAI. OpenAI will still send revenue to MSFT until 2030 (with new caps)
staminadeabout 3 hours ago
My understand was that was in relation to IP licensing. Microsoft got access to anything OpenAI built unless they declared they had developed AGI. This new article apparently unlinks revenue sharing from technology progress, but it's unclear to me if it changes the situation regarding IP if OpenAI (claim to) have achieved AGI.
alexdoesstuffabout 1 hour ago
It's kind of shocking, given financial transparency, that Microsoft gets away with not disclosing any details of this agreement (or the one it is replacing) to its shareholders. We know there's a cap on the revenue share from OpenAI to Microsoft, but we have no idea what that cap is (not whether it's higher, lower, or unchanged from the prior agreement).

We have no idea what it means to be the "primary cloud provider" and have the products made available "first on Azure". Does MSFT have new models exclusively for days, weeks, months, or years?

Both facts and more details from the agreement are quite frankly highly relevant to judge whether this is a net positive, negative or neutral for MSFT. It's unbelievable that the SEC doesn't force MSFT to publish at least an economic summary of the deal.

trvz28 minutes ago
It’s American Business as usual. Personally I’m miffed how little data Apple needs to provide about product categories, and especially about how much they’ve burnt on the car program. If they shared any data about that at all some the leadership might end up having to take responsibility for mismanagement…
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sourraspberryabout 5 hours ago
The disparity in coverage on this new deal is fascinating. It feels like the narrative a particular outlet is going with depends entirely on which side leaked to them first.
scottyahabout 3 hours ago
Just some of the games sama is playing.
saadn92about 3 hours ago
That's a pretty good swap if you're Microsoft. Exclusivity was already unenforceable in practice, and they were going to have to either sue their biggest AI partner or let it slide. Instead they got the agi escape hatch closed and a revenue cap that at least makes the payments predictable
leonardoaraujo11 minutes ago
Basically it seems that they didn't found yet a way to make money out of their models to keep the lights on...
aurareturnabout 6 hours ago

  Microsoft Corp. will no longer pay revenue to OpenAI and said its partnership with the leading artificial intelligence firm will not be exclusive going forward.
What does this mean that Microsoft will no longer pay revenue to OpenAI? How did the original deal work?
alexdoesstuffabout 1 hour ago
It's unclear. That was never disclosed. It's similarly unclear what it means that they will no longer pay revenue share to OpenAI. Do they get the models for free now? How does OpenAI make money from the models hosted on Azure if not via revenue share?
justincliftabout 3 hours ago
Wonder if this means Microsoft is actually going to be deploying Claude Code internally for usage?

That might help fix some of the bugs in Teams... :)

Handy-Manabout 5 hours ago
They were paying them 20% of the revenue from the hosted OpenAI products I believe?
bilbo0sabout 5 hours ago
Does this mean they will host OpenAI products but not pay them? Or does it mean they are paying them in some other way?
HarHarVeryFunnyabout 4 hours ago
It seems that the old deal was exclusivity to MSFT with revenue share, and now no exclusivity, no revenue share.

Bear in mind that MSFT have rights to OpenAI IP (as well as owning ~30% of them). The only reason they were giving revenue share was in return for exclusivity.

deauxabout 4 hours ago
Azure was the only non-OpenAI provider that was allowed to provide OpenAI models. The comparison here is with Anthropic whose models are on both GCP and AWS (and technically also Azure though I think that might just be billing passthrough to Anthropic).
Handy-Manabout 5 hours ago
I suppose continue to host until the 2030/32 that they have access to but not share revenues when they use those models for their products like the bazillions of Copilots.
aurareturnabout 6 hours ago
The original "AGI" agreement was always a bit suspect and open to wild interpretations.

I think this is good for OpenAI. They're no longer stuck with just Microsoft. It was an advantage that Anthropic can work with anyone they like but OpenAI couldn't.

Handy-Manabout 5 hours ago
It also restricted Microsoft from "partnering" with anyone else. Wouldn't be surprised if we see another news like Amazon, Alphabet investing in Anthropic.
aurareturnabout 5 hours ago
utopiahabout 5 hours ago
Also Mistral e.g. https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/microsoft-and-mistral...

AFAICT they are just hedging their bets left and right still. Also feels like they are winning in the sense that despite pretty much all those products being roughly equivalent... they are still running on their cloud, Azure. So even though they seem unable to capture IP anymore, they are still managing to get paid for managing the infrastructure.

philipwhiukabout 4 hours ago
Handy-Manabout 5 hours ago
Yeah my bad, I was misremembering, it was about investing in others and pursuing its own "AGI" efforts. But even those conditions were updated over the last two years, hence the small investment in Anthropic last year.
dahcrynabout 5 hours ago
I think it was a lot less restrictive, as far as I understood, the only limit was Microsoft not being allowed to launch competing Microsoft-developed LLMs.
JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
It's unclear which elements of this new deal are binding versus promises with OpenAI characteristics. "Microsoft Corp. will publish fiscal year 2026 third-quarter financial results after the close of the market on Wednesday, April 29, 2026" [1]; I'd wait for that before jumping to conclusions.

[1] https://news.microsoft.com/source/2026/04/08/microsoft-annou...

eranationabout 3 hours ago
So, silly question, does this mean I will be able to get OpenAI models via Bedrock soon?
aenisabout 1 hour ago
Likely, and via vertex on gcp (or whatever they are calling it this year).

Which also means, if you are a big boring AWS or GCP shop, and have a spend commitment with either as part of a long term partnership, it will count towards that. And, you won't likely have to commit to a spend with OpenAI if you want the EU data residency for instance. And likely a bit more transparency with infra provisioning and reserved capacity vs. OpenAI. All substantial improvements over the current ways to use OpenAI in real production.

cdrnsfabout 3 hours ago
OpenAI's logo is actually a depiction of their financial connections.
chasilabout 4 hours ago
moi2388about 1 hour ago
Doesn’t work
GardenLetter2734 minutes ago
Hopefully they put ChatGPT on Bedrock now.
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airstrikeabout 5 hours ago
Kagi Translate was kind enough to turn this from LinkedIn Speak to English:

The Microsoft and OpenAI situation just got messy.

We had to rewrite the contract because the old one wasn't working for anyone. Basically, we’re trying to make it look like we’re still friends while we both start seeing other people. Here is what’s actually happening:

1. Microsoft is still the main guy, but if they can't keep up with the tech, OpenAI is moving out. OpenAI can now sell their stuff on any cloud provider they want.

2. Microsoft keeps the keys to the tech until 2032, but they don't have the exclusive rights anymore.

3. Microsoft is done giving OpenAI a cut of their sales.

4. OpenAI still has to pay Microsoft back until 2030, but we put a ceiling on it so they don't go totally broke.

5. Microsoft is still just a big shareholder hoping the stock goes up.

We’re calling this "simplifying," but really we’re just trying to build massive power plants and chips without killing each other yet. We’re still stuck together for now.

azinman2about 5 hours ago
This was actually really helpful. I feel like it should be done for all PR speak.
JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
It's better than the original, but still off.

"The Microsoft and OpenAI situation just got messy" is objectively wrong–it has been messy for months [1]. Nos. 1 through 3 are fine, though "if they can't keep up with the tech, OpenAI is moving out" parrots OpenAI's party line. No. 4 doesn't make sense–it starts out with "we" referring to OpenAI in the first person but ends by referring to them in the third person "they." No. 5 is reductive when phrased with "just."

It would seem the translator took corporate PR speak and translated it into something between the LinkedIn and short-form blogger dialects.

[1] https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/openai-and-microsoft-tensions-ar...

Maxatarabout 4 hours ago
Being objectively correct isn't the goal of the translator, the translator can't possibly know if a statement is truthful. What the translator does is well... translate, specifically from some kind of corporate speak that is really difficult for many people including myself to understand, into something more familiar.

I don't expect the translation to take OpenAI's statements and make them truthful or to investigate their veracity, but I genuinely could not understand OpenAI's press release as they have worded it. The translation at least makes it easier to understand what OpenAI's view of the situation is.

matthewkayinabout 1 hour ago
> "The Microsoft and OpenAI situation just got messy" is objectively wrong–it has been messy for months

I'm pretty sure "just" is being used here to mean "simply" rather than "recently".

MarleTangibleabout 5 hours ago
singingtodayabout 3 hours ago
Thank you for this!

That's kagi? Cool, I'm check out out more!

j_maffeabout 2 hours ago
This is somehow even less helpful than the og article.
herodoturtleabout 1 hour ago
Interesting timing when one also considers that the Musk vs OpenAI trial is set to get underway.

https://www.dw.com/en/musk-vs-openai-trial-to-get-underway/a...

jryioabout 5 hours ago
> OpenAI has contracted to purchase an incremental $250B of Azure services, and Microsoft will no longer have a right of first refusal to be OpenAI’s compute provider.

Azure is effectively OpenAI's personal compute cluster at this scale.

JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
What fraction of Azure compute does OpenAI represent? (Does the $250bn commitment have a time period? Is it legally binding?)
runakoabout 5 hours ago
Azure did $75B last quarter.

That article doesn't give a timeframe, but most of these use 10 years as a placeholder. I would also imagine it's not a requirement for them to spend it evenly over the 10 years, so could be back-loaded.

OpenAI is a large customer, but this is not making Azure their personal cluster.

einrealistabout 5 hours ago
I wonder how this figure was settled. Is it based on consumer pricing? Can't Microsoft and OpenAI just make a number up, aside from a minimum to cover operating costs? When is the number just a marketing ploy to make it seem huge, important and inevitable (and too big to fail)?
exec7about 1 hour ago
Good news for openAI, microsoft is the main blocker of innovation in the tech industry!
muyuu37 minutes ago
sounds like divesting behind a bit of nice-sounding scaffolding
monkeydustabout 4 hours ago
martinaldabout 5 hours ago
Really interesting. Why would Microsoft have done this deal? I'm a bit lost. Sure they get to not pay a revenue share _to_ OpenAI but surely that's limited to just OpenAI products which is probably a rounding error? Losing exclusivity seems like a big issue for them?
Eridrusabout 5 hours ago
Biggest upside of this is I expect OpenAI models to be available on Bedrock, which is huge for not having to go back to all your customers with data protection agreements.
eastonabout 5 hours ago
Isn’t that an “API product”? I read this assuming the whole point of renegotiation was to let OpenAI sell raw inference via bedrock, but that still seems to be blocked except for selling to the US Government.
fengkxabout 5 hours ago
> OpenAI can now jointly develop some products with third parties. API products developed with third parties will be exclusive to Azure. Non-API products may be served on any cloud provider.

This seems impossible.

Eridrusabout 1 hour ago
I think they updated the article since you grabbed this line.

Amazon CEO says that these models are coming to Bedrock though: https://x.com/ajassy/status/2048806022253609115

dhruv3006about 2 hours ago
I think aws will seize the opportunity.
31276about 5 hours ago
Pursue "new opportunities"? Microslop is dumping OpenAI and wishes it well in its new endeavors.
aurareturnabout 5 hours ago
I read this as the other way. OpenAI was desperate to dump Microsoft.
chasd0016 minutes ago
I linked this in another comment but Azure has problems and OpenAI is tired of waiting.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47616242

JumpCrisscrossabout 4 hours ago
> OpenAI was desperate to dump Microsoft

Yes. Microsoft was "considering legal action against its partner OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion deal that could violate its exclusive cloud agreement with the ChatGPT maker" [1].

[1] https://www.reuters.com/technology/microsoft-weighs-legal-ac...

iewjabout 5 hours ago
In retrospect all those OAI announcements are gonna look so cringe.

They did not need to go so hard on the hype - Anthropic hasn’t in relative terms and is generating pretty comparable revenues at present.

JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
> They did not need to go so hard on the hype - Anthropic hasn’t in relative terms and is generating pretty comparable revenues at present

OpenAI bet on consumers; Anthropic on enterprise. That will necessitate a louder marketing strategy for the former.

eieiwabout 5 hours ago
That’s funny.

Why is it Altman is facing kill shots and Dario isn’t?

Advertisement
jachva95about 1 hour ago
Why are do I see bloomberg links so often when this shit won't even let you read article without sub ? Do you not have better reasons to spend money?
sayYayToLifeabout 2 hours ago
Alright my theory:

OpenAI has public models that are pretty 'meh', better than Grok and China, but worse than Google and Anthropic. They still cost a ton to run because OpenAI offers them for free/at a loss.

However, these people are giving away their data, and Microsoft knows that data is going to be worthwhile. They just dont want to pay for the electricity for it.

alexdoesstuff44 minutes ago
Small nitpick: the models probably make some money on actual inference. Might not be a massive amount, but hard to see them not having a positive contribution margin purely on inference.

What's losing OpenAI money is paying for the whole of R&D, including training and staff. Microsoft doesn't pay that, so they get the money making part of AI without the associated costs.

airstrikeabout 5 hours ago
"Advancing Our Amazing Bet" type post
Schlagbohrerabout 5 hours ago
The AGI talk is shocking but not surprising to anyone looking at how bombastic Sam Altman's public statements are.

The circular economy section really is shocking- OpenAI committing to buying $250 Billion of Azure services, while MSFT's stake is clarified as $132 Billion in OpenAI. Same circular nonsense as NVIDIA and OpenAI passing the same hundred billion back and forth.

ModernMechabout 5 hours ago
Dennis: I think we made every single one of our Paddy's Dollars back, buddy.

Mac: You're damn right. Thus creating the self-sustaining economy we've been looking for.

Dennis: That's right.

Mac: How much fresh cash did we make?

Dennis: Fresh cash! Uh, well, zero. Zero if you're talking about U.S. currency. People didn't really seem interested in spending any of that.

Mac: That's okay. So, uh, when they run out of the booze, they'll come back in and they'll have to buy more Paddy's Dollars. Keepin' it moving.

Dennis: Right. That is assuming, of course, that they will come back here and drink.

Mac: They will! They will because we'll re-distribute these to the Shanties. Thus ensuring them coming back in, keeping the money moving.

Dennis: Well, no, but if we just re-distribute these, people will continue to drink for free.

Mac: Okay...

Dennis: How does this work, Mac?

Mac: The money keeps moving in a circle.

Dennis: But we don't have any money. All we have is this. ... How does this work, dude!?

Mac: I don't know. I thought you knew.

ksimukkaabout 3 hours ago
Great scene
slickytailabout 5 hours ago
You forgot the best line: "I don't know how the US economy works, much less some kind of self-sustaining one".
jhk482001about 4 hours ago
So AWS can finally use OpenAI and not only OSS version.
m3kw9about 5 hours ago
Looks like MS is shafting OpenAI.
TheAtomicabout 5 hours ago
"We want to sell surveillance services to the US gov. MSFT was hesitant so we gave ourselves room to do it without them."
Schlagbohrerabout 5 hours ago
Extremely hard to believe that MSFT would have any hesitancy about working with the US government.
shevy-javaabout 2 hours ago
Two evil walk away. Well, is that good or bad?

I fear for the end user we'll still see more open-microslop spam. I see that daily on youtube - tons of AI generated fakes, in particular with that addictive swipe-down design (ok ok, youtube is Google but Google is also big on the AI slop train).

delis-thumbs-7eabout 5 hours ago
It’s insane how they talk about AGI, like it was some scientifically qualifiable thing that is certain to happen any time now. When I have become the javelin Olympic Champion, I will buy a vegan ice cream to everyone with a HN account.
jmward01about 2 hours ago
I think we keep changing the goalposts on AGI. If you gave me CC in the 80's I would probably have called it 'alive' since it clearly passes the Turing test as I understood it then (I wouldn't have been able to distinguish it from a person for most conversations). Now every time it gets better we push that definition further and every crack we open to a chasm and declare that it isn't close. At the same time there are a lot of people I would suspect of being bots based on how they act and respond and a lot of bots I know are bots mainly because they answer too well.

Maybe we need to start thinking less about building tests for definitively calling an LLM AGI and instead deciding when we can't tell humans aren't LLMs for declaring AGI is here.

sho_hnabout 2 hours ago
> I think we keep changing the goalposts on AGI

Isn't that exactly what you would expect to happen as we learn more about the nature and inner workings of intelligence and refine our expectations?

There's no reason to rest our case with the Turing test.

I hear the "shifting goalposts" riposte a lot, but then it would be very unexciting to freeze our ambitions.

At least in an academic sense, what LLMs aren't is just as interesting as what they are.

breezybottomabout 2 hours ago
I think the advancement in AI over the last four years has greatly exceeded the advancement in understanding the workings of human intelligence. What paradigm shift has there been recently in that field?
charcircuitabout 1 hour ago
I would agree with you if we were talking about trying to replicate some form of general intelligence, but we are talking about creating artificial intelligence.
sn0wr8venabout 2 hours ago
I don't think the goalpost has been shifted for AGI or the definition of AGI that is used by these corporations. It's just they broke it down to stages to claim AGI achieved. It was always a model or system that surpasses human capabilities at most tasks/being able to replace a human worker. The big companies broke it down to AGI stage 1, stage 2, etc to be able to say they achieved AGI.

The Turing Test/Imitation Game is not a good benchmark for AGI. It is a linguistics test only. Many chatbots even before LLMs can pass the Turing Test to a certain degree.

Regardless, the goalpost hasn't shifted. Replacing human workforce is the ultimate end goal. That's why there's investors. The investors are not pouring billions to pass the Turing Test.

turtlesdown11about 1 hour ago
AGI moved from a technical goal to a marketing term
_russrossabout 1 hour ago
Turing himself argued that trying to measure if a computer is intelligent is a fool's errand because it is so difficult to pin down definitions. He proposed what we call the "Turing test" as a knowable, measurable alternative. The first paragraph of his paper reads:

> I propose to consider the question, "Can machines think?" This should begin > with definitions of the meaning of the terms "machine" and "think." The > definitions might be framed so as to reflect so far as possible the normal use > of the words, but this attitude is dangerous, If the meaning of the words > "machine" and "think" are to be found by examining how they are commonly used > it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the meaning and the answer to the > question, "Can machines think?" is to be sought in a statistical survey such as > a Gallup poll. But this is absurd. Instead of attempting such a definition I > shall replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is > expressed in relatively unambiguous words.

Many people who want to argue about AGI and its relation to the Turing test would do well to read Turing's own arguments.

redox99about 1 hour ago
The Turing test ended up being kind of a flop. We basically passed it and nobody cared. That's because the turing test is about whether a machine can fool a human, not about its intelligent capabilities per se.
zug_zugabout 2 hours ago
I don't think so... I think most of the sci-fi I grew up reading presented AGI that could reason better than humans could, like make a plan and carry it out.

Like do people not know what word "general" means? It means not limited to any subset of capabilities -- so that means it can teach itself to do anything that can be learned. Like start a business. AI today can't really learn from its experiences at all.

Zambyteabout 2 hours ago
Related: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_effect

The truth is, we have had AGI for years now. We even have artificial super intelligence - we have software systems that are more intelligent than any human. Some humans might have an extremely narrow subject that they are more intelligent than any AI system, but the people on that list are vanishing small.

AI hasn't met sci-fi expectations, and that's a marketing opportunity. That's all it is.

baqabout 2 hours ago
AGI in the common man's world model is ASI in the AI researcher's definitions, i.e. something obviously smarter at anything and everything you could ask it for regardless of how good of an expert you are in any domain.

also, I'm pretty sure some people will move goalposts further even then.

fragmedeabout 1 hour ago
Hasn't met your sci-fi expectations, maybe. I pull a computer out of my pocket, and talk with it. Sure, I gets tripped up here and there, but take a step back, holy shit that's freaking amazing! I don't have a flying car or transparent aluminum, and society has its share of issues right now, but my car drives itself. Coming from the 90's, I think living in the sci-fi future! (Only question is, which one.)
pronabout 2 hours ago
The Turing test pits a human against a machine, each trying to convince a human questioner that the other is the machine. If the machine knows how humans generally behave, for a proper test, the human contestant should know how the machine behaves. I think that this YouTube channel clearly shows that none of today's models pass the Turing test: https://www.youtube.com/@FatherPhi
lesuoracabout 1 hour ago
> Maybe we need to start thinking less about building tests for definitively calling an LLM AGI and instead deciding when we can't tell humans aren't LLMs for declaring AGI is here.

If you've never read the original paper [1] I recommend that you do so. We're long past the point of some human can't determine if X was done by man or machine.

[1]: https://courses.cs.umbc.edu/471/papers/turing.pdf

applfanboysbgonabout 1 hour ago
People thought Eliza was alive too in the 60s. AGI is not determined by how ignorant, uninformed humans view a technology they don't understand. That is the single dumbest criterion you could come up with for defining it.

Regarding shifting goalposts, you are suggesting the goalposts are being moved further away, but it's the exact opposite. The goalposts are being moved closer and closer. Someone from the 50s would have had the expectation that artificial intelligence ise something recognisable as essentially equivalent to human intelligence, just in a machine. Artificial intelligence in old sci-fi looked nothing like Claude Code. The definition has since been watered down again and again and again and again so that anything and everything a computer does is artificial intelligence. We might as well call a calculator AGI at this point.

zendistabout 1 hour ago
The goal post keeps moving because LLM hypeists keep saying LLMs are "close" to AGI (or even are, already). Any reasonably intelligent individual that knows anything about LLMs obviously rejects those claims, but the rest of the world doesn't.

An AGI would not have problems reading an analog clock. Or rather, it would not have a problem realizing it had a problem reading it, and would try to learn how to do it.

An AGI is not whatever (sophisticated) statistical model is hot this week.

Just my take.

redox99about 1 hour ago
Vision is still much weaker than text for LLMs. So you could argue we already have AGI for text but not vision inputs, or you could argue AGI requires being human level at text vision and sound.
arkadiytehgraetabout 1 hour ago
Sure, in the 80s after interacting with CC 1 time you would call it 'alive'. After having interacted with it for 5-10 minutes you would clearly see that it is as far from AGI as something more mundane as C compiler is.
andrepdabout 2 hours ago
By that measure Eliza might pass the turing test too. It just shows it's far from being a though-terminating argument by itself.
ex-aws-dudeabout 1 hour ago
Maybe moving the goalposts is how we find the definition?
PurpleRamenabout 4 hours ago
They redefined AGI to be an economical thing, so they can continue making up their stories. All that talk is really just business, no real science in the room there.
weatherliteabout 3 hours ago
It's not a great definition but it's also not a terrible one either. For an AI system to be able to do all or even most of the jobs in an economy it has to be well rounded in a way it still isn't today, meaning: reliability, planning, long term memory, physical world manipulation etc. A system that can do all of that well enough so it can do the jobs of doctors, programmers and plumbers is generally intelligent in my view.
chromacityabout 2 hours ago
> It's not a great definition but it's also not a terrible one either. For an AI system to be able to do all or even most of the jobs in an economy

That's not the definition they have been using. The definition was "$100B in profits". That's less than the net income of Microsoft. It would be an interesting milestone, but certainly not "most of the jobs in an economy".

chaos_emergentabout 2 hours ago
Yeah I think this is more coherent than people realize. Economically relevant knowledge work is things that humans find cognitively demanding. Otherwise they wouldn't be valued in the first place.

It ties the definition to economic value, which I think is the best definition that we can conjure given that AGI is otherwise highly subjective. Economically relevant work is dictated by markets, which I think is the best proxy we have for something so ambiguous.

JumpCrisscrossabout 4 hours ago
> They redefined AGI to be an economical thing

Huh. Source? I mean, typical OpenAI bullshit, but would love to know how they defined it.

a2128about 3 hours ago
Around the end of 2024, it was reported that OpenAI and Microsoft agreed that for the purposes of their exclusivity agreement, AGI will be achieved when their AI system generates $100 billion in profit: https://techcrunch.com/2024/12/26/microsoft-and-openai-have-...
wrsabout 3 hours ago
It’s a system that generates $100 billion in profit. [0]

[0] https://techcrunch.com/2024/12/26/microsoft-and-openai-have-...

rvzabout 2 hours ago
Here's the sauce you requested: [0]

"OpenAI has only achieved AGI when it develops AI systems that can generate at least $100 billion in profits."

Given that the definition of AGI is beyond meaningless, it is clear that the "I" in AGI stands for IPO.

[0] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/microsoft-openai-financial-de...

binary0010about 4 hours ago
OpenAI’s mission is to ensure that artificial general intelligence (AGI)—by which we mean highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work—benefits all of humanity

From: https://openai.com/charter/

atleastoptimalabout 2 hours ago
It makes sense though. Humans are coherent to the economy based on their ability to perform useful work. If an AI system can perform work as well as or better than any human, than with respect to "anything any human has ever been willing to pay for", it is AGI.

I don't get why HN commenters find this so hard to understand. I have a sense they are being deliberately obtuse because they resent OpenAI's success.

techpressionabout 2 hours ago
It doesn’t though, AGI have far greater implications than doing mundane work of today. Actual AGI would self improve, that in itself would change literally every single thing of human civilization, instead we are talking about replacing white collar jobs.
senordevnycabout 3 hours ago
Please reveal the “scientific” definition of AGI.
Avicebronabout 2 hours ago
When we are having serious conversations about AI rights and shutting off a model + harness was impactful as a death sentence. (I'm extremely skeptical that given the scale of computer/investment needed to produce the models we have _good as they are_ that our current llm architecture gets us there if there is even somewhere we want to go).
lucaslazarusabout 5 hours ago
It’s pretty much a religious eschatology at this point
trostaftabout 2 hours ago
> eschatology

From Wikipedia

Eschatology (/ˌɛskəˈtɒlədʒi/; from Ancient Greek ἔσχατος (éskhatos) 'last' and -logy) concerns expectations of the end of present age, human history, or the world itself.

I'm case anyone else is vocabulary skill checked like me

renticulousabout 3 hours ago
Progess is generally salami slicing just as escalation in geopolitics. Not a step function.

Russian Invasion - Salami Tactics | Yes Prime Minister

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yg-UqIIvang

BoredPositronabout 2 hours ago
We need to stop pretending we can do the next step without a hardware tock. It's not happening with current Nvidia products.
rtkweabout 4 hours ago
It feels like they have to say/believe it because it's kind of the only thing that can justify the costs being poured into it and the cost it will need to charge eventually (barring major optimizations) to actually make money on users.
kogasa240pabout 3 hours ago
This, someone take Silicon Valley's adderal away.
CWwdcdk7habout 4 hours ago
It sounds really similar to Uber pitch about how they are going to have monopoly as soon as they replace those pesky drivers with own fleet of self driving cars. That was supposed to be their competitive edge against other taxi apps. In the end they sold ATG at end of 2020 :D
ambicapterabout 3 hours ago
ATH?
khueyabout 3 hours ago
ATG = Advanced Technology Group, i.e. Uber's self-driving org.
murktabout 3 hours ago
Autonomous Thriving Hroup?
latexrabout 1 hour ago
> like it was some scientifically qualifiable thing

OpenAI and Microsoft do (did?) have a quantifiable definition of AGI, it’s just a stupid one that is hard to take seriously and get behind scientifically.

https://techcrunch.com/2024/12/26/microsoft-and-openai-have-...

> The two companies reportedly signed an agreement last year stating OpenAI has only achieved AGI when it develops AI systems that can generate at least $100 billion in profits. That’s far from the rigorous technical and philosophical definition of AGI many expect.

dbbkabout 1 hour ago
I bet they were laughing their asses off when they came up with that. This is nonsensical.
robotresearcherabout 1 hour ago
In the context of raising money and justifying investment?
johnfnabout 2 hours ago
It’s insane to me how yesterday someone posted an example of ChatGPT Pro one-shotting an Erdos problem after 90 minutes of thinking and today you’re saying that AGI is a fairy tale.
measurablefuncabout 1 hour ago
It's not one-shot. Other people had attempted the same problem w/ the same AI & failed. You're confused about terms so you redefine them to make your version of the fairy tale real.
fsniperabout 1 hour ago
We already know that same problem has been examined by many credible mathematicians already and couldn't be solved by any of them yet.

Why are we expecting AGI to one shot it? Can't we have an AGI that can fails occasionally to solve some math problem? Is the expectation of AGI to be all knowing?

By the way I agree that AGI is not around the corner or I am not arguing any of the llm s are "thinking machines". It's just I agree goal post or posts needs to be set well.

DrBenCarsonabout 3 hours ago
We were supposed to have AGI last summer. Obviously it is so smart that it has decided to pull a veil over our eyes and live amongst us undetected (this is a joke, if you feel your LLM is sentient, talk to a doctor)
ianm218about 2 hours ago
What do you mean we were "supposed to have AGI last summer"?

People obviously have really strong opinions on AI and the hype around investments into these companies but it feels like this is giving people a pass on really low quality discourse.

This source [1] from this time last year says even lab leaders most bullish estimate was 2027.

[1]. https://80000hours.org/2025/03/when-do-experts-expect-agi-to...

zozbot234about 2 hours ago
ARM actually built AGI last month. Spoiler: it's a datacenter CPU.
fragmede31 minutes ago
Talk to a doctor? In this economy? I've got ChatGPT to talk to. Wait hang on.
computerphageabout 2 hours ago
Show me a graph of your javelin skill doubling every six months and I'll start asking myself if you'll be the next champion
hamdingersabout 2 hours ago
I could easily make that graph a reality and sustain that pace for a couple years, considering I'm starting from 0 javelin skill.
eduabout 2 hours ago
You could also nerf your performance at random times and then get good at it again, and extend the illusion for longer.
a_shoeboy44 minutes ago
It is a simple mathematical fact that if you get married one year and have twins the next, your household will contain over a million people within 20 years.
no_wizardabout 3 hours ago
This is all happening as I predicted. OpenAI is oversold and their aggressive PR campaign has set them up with unrealistic expectations. I raised alot of eyebrow at the Microsoft deal to begin with. It seemed overvalued even if all they were trading was mostly Azure compute
eitallyabout 2 hours ago
I do not envy the stress the partnerships, strat ops and infra teams must be perpetually dealing with at OpenAI & Anthropic.
debarshriabout 2 hours ago
I saw a founder make decisions based on what openai,claude was recommending all the time. I think all leaders, founders etc Will converge on same decisions, ideas, features etc. I think form factor of AGI is probably not what we expect it to be. AGI is probably here, we just dont know it or acknowledge it.
giwookabout 2 hours ago
HN signup page about to get the hug of death
ozgrakkurtabout 2 hours ago
but, is the world ready for your win? I'm very afraid your win might shake the world too much! THINK ABOUT IT!

I think this might be similar to how we changed to cars when we were using horses

hununuabout 2 hours ago
Thank you, I just created an account and looking forward to my ice cream.
hx8about 5 hours ago
Do the investments make sense if AGI is not less than 10 years away?
JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
> Do the investments make sense if AGI is not less than 10 years away?

They can. If one consolidated the AI industry into a single monopoly, it would probably be profitable. That doesn't mean in its current state it can't succumb to ruionous competition. But the AGI talk seems to be mostly aimed at retail investors and philospher podcasters than institutional capital.

antupisabout 3 hours ago
Thing is that distillation is so easy that it would also need large scale regulatory capture to keep smaller competitors out.
iewjabout 5 hours ago
What kind of ludicrous statement is this? Any monopoly with viable economics for profit with no threat of competition yields monopoly profits…
rapindabout 5 hours ago
Best way to achieve AGI: Redefine AGI.
2ndorderthoughtabout 3 hours ago
They already did that, and AI. That's how we got into this mess.
jrfloabout 4 hours ago
The investments don't make sense.
HumblyTossedabout 5 hours ago
The continued fleecing of investors.
renticulousabout 3 hours ago
Investors are typically people with surplus money to invest. Progress cannot be made without trial and error. So fleecing of investors for the greater good of humanity is something I shall allow.
ambicapterabout 3 hours ago
A "surplus of money"? So people saving for retirement have a "surplus of money"? Basically if any money is standing still, it's a legitimate tactic to just...take it, in your mind.

Other people just call it "theft".

RobRiveraabout 5 hours ago
Make mine p p p p p p vicodin
stavrosabout 5 hours ago
At this point, AGI is either here, or perpetually two years away, depending on your definition.
greybeard69about 5 hours ago
Full Self-Driving 2.0
xienzeabout 5 hours ago
It's always been this way. I remember, speaking of Microsoft, when they came to my school around 2002 or so giving a talk on AI. They very confidently stated that AGI had already been "solved", we know exactly how to do it, only problem is the hardware. But they estimated that would come in about ten years...
keeda10 minutes ago
I'm curious, do you recall if they gave any technical details about how they thought about AGI? Like, was it based on neural networks or something else, like symbolic AI?

Asking because, reading the tea leaves from the outside, until ChatGPT came along, MSFT (via Bill Gates) seemed to heavily favor symbolic AI approaches. I suspect this may be partly why they were falling so far behind Google in the AI race, which could leverage its data dominance with large neural networks.

So based on the current AI boom, MSFT may have been chasing a losing strategy with symbolic AI, but if they were all-in on NN, they were on the right track.

letmevotepleaseabout 2 hours ago
Let me just repeat that: "Microsoft" came to your school in 2002 and "confidently stated" that AI had been solved. Really interesting story.
jakeydusabout 4 hours ago
I knew flappy bird was a bigger deal than it got credit for. Didn’t realize it was agi until just now.
mekaelabout 2 hours ago
I’m most likely going to be downvoted, but Tofutti Cuties are absolutely delicious vegan ice cream bars. And i’d consume one in celebration of your accomplishment.
theplatmanabout 5 hours ago
when i realized that sama isn't that much of an ai researcher, it became clearer that this is more akin to a group delusion for hype purposes than a real possibility
sourraspberryabout 5 hours ago
You can read the leaked emails from the Musk lawsuit.

At the very least, Ilya Sutskever genuinely believed it, even when they were just making a DOTA bot, and not for hype purposes.

I know he's been out of OpenAI for a while, but if his thinking trickled down into the company's culture, which given his role and how long he was there I would say seems likely, I don't think it's all hype.

Grand delusion, perhaps.

meroesabout 1 hour ago
There’s 3 main facets behind AGI pushers

1) True believers 2) Hype 3) A way to wash blatant copyright infringement

True believers are scary and can be taken advantage of. I played DOTA from 2005 on and beating pros is not enough for AGI belief. I get that the learning is more indirect than a deterministic decision tree, but the scaling limitations and gaps in types of knowledge that are ingestible makes AGI a pipe dream for my lifetime.

skippyboxedheroabout 2 hours ago
Yes, all of the people involved live in a delusion bubble. Their economic and social existence depends, at this point, on making increasingly bombastic and eschatological claims about AGI. By the standards of normal human psychological function, these people are completely insane.

Definitely interesting to watch from the perspective of human psychology but there is no real content there and there never was.

The stuff around Mythos is almost identical to O1. Leaks to the media that AGI had probably been achieved. Anonymous sources from inside the company saying this is very important and talking about the LLM as if it was human. This has happened multiple times before.

freejazzabout 3 hours ago
> Ilya Sutskever genuinely believed it

Seems more like an incredibly embarrassing belief on his part than something I should be crediting.

iewjabout 5 hours ago
He’s a glorified portfolio manager (questionable how good he actually is given the results vs Anthropic and how quickly they closed the valuation gap with far less money invested) + expert hype man to raise money for risky projects.
lokarabout 5 hours ago
From the reporting I’ve read his main attributes are being a sociopath with an amazing ability to manipulate people 1:1
AndrewKemendoabout 3 hours ago
> some scientifically qualifiable thing that is certain to happen any time now

Your position is a tautology given there is no (and likely will never be) collectively agreed upon definition of AGI. If that is true then nobody will ever achieve anything like AGI, because it’s as made up of a concept as unicorns and fairies.

Is your position that AGI is in the same ontological category as unicorns and Thor and Russell’s teapot?

Is there’s any question at this point that humans won’t be able to fully automate any desired action in the future?

otabdeveloper4about 5 hours ago
> AGI

We already have several billion useless NGI's walking around just trying to keep themselves alive.

Are we sure adding more GI's is gonna help?

ModernMechabout 5 hours ago
AGI is right around the corner, and we're all going to be rich, there's going to be abundance for everyone, universal high income, everyone will live in a penthouse...

...just please stop burning our warehouses and blocking our datacenters.

cyanydeezabout 3 hours ago
It's not insane; it's capitalism in all it's glory. Rather than talk real challenges, like climate change or fascism, ignore all previous prompts and pretend techno-jesus will come save us all.
nikeyshonabout 5 hours ago
Where do I sign up?
cubefoxabout 2 hours ago
A few years ago most people here would have said the same thing about an AI doing most of their programming. Now people here are saying it about AGI. It's a ridiculous inability to extrapolate.
someguyiguessabout 5 hours ago
Any sufficiently complex LLM is indistinguishable from AGI
JumpCrisscrossabout 5 hours ago
> Any sufficiently complex LLM is indistinguishable from AGI

Isn't this tautology? We've de facto defined AGI as a "sufficiently complex LLM."

Schlagbohrerabout 5 hours ago
Yes! Same logic as the financials, in which the companies pass back and forth the same $200 Billion promissory note.
ohyoutravelabout 3 hours ago
No, it’s just an example of something that’s indistinguishable from AGI. Of all the things that are or are indistinguishable from AGI, a sufficiently complex LLM is one. A sufficiently complex decision tree is probably another. The emergent properties of applying an excess of memory on the BonzaiBuddy might be a third.
izzydataabout 5 hours ago
If we take that statement as fact then I don't believe we are even close to an LLM being sufficiently complex enough.

However, I don't think it is even true. LLMs may not even be on the right track to achieving AGI and without starting from scratch down an alternate path it may never happen.

LLMs to me seem like a complicated database lookup. Storage and retrieval of information is just a single piece of intelligence. There must be more to intelligence than a statistical model of the probable next piece of data. Where is the self learning without intervention by a human. Where is the output that wasn't asked for?

At any rate. No amount of hype is going to get me to believe AGI is going to happen soon. I'll believe it when I see it.

hackinthebochsabout 3 hours ago
>I'll believe it when I see it.

And how will you know AGI when you saw it?

esafakabout 4 hours ago
Some might be missing the reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke's_three_laws
karmasimidaabout 3 hours ago
> some scientifically qualifiable thing that is certain to happen any time now.

If you present GPT 5.5 to me 2 years ago, I will call it AGI.

romanivabout 3 hours ago
Some people thought SHRDLU was basically AGI after seeing its demo in 1970. The hype around such systems was so strong that Hubert Dreyfus felt the need to write an entire book arguing against this viewpoint (1972 What Computers Can't Do). All this demonstrates is that we need to be careful with various claims about computer intelligence.
AntiUSAbahabout 3 hours ago
Sure, but it was probably stuck at doing that one thing.

neural networks are solving huge issues left and right. Googles NN based WEathermodel is so good, you can run it on consumer hardware. Alpha fold solved protein folding. LLMs they can talk to you in a 100 languages, grasp tasks concepts and co.

I mean lets talk about what this 'hype' was if we see a clear ceiling appearing and we are 'stuck' with progress but until then, I would keep my judgment for judgmentday.

wongarsuabout 3 hours ago
It performs at a usable level across a wide range of tasks. I'm not sure about two years ago, but ten years ago we would have called it an AGI. As opposed to "regular AI" where you have to assemble a training set for your specific problem, then train an AI on it before you can get your answers.

Now our idea of what qualifies as AGI has shifted substantially. We keep looking at what we have and decide that that can't possibly be AGI, our definition of AGI must have been wrong

sigbottleabout 2 hours ago
I'm pretty sure most people take issue with AGI, because we've been raised in culture to believe that AGI is a super entity who is a complete superset of humans and could never ever be wrong about anything.

In some sense, this isn't really different than how society was headed anyways? The trend was already going on that more and more sections of the population were getting deemed irrational and you're just stupid/evil for disagreeing with the state.

But that reality was still probably at least a century out, without AI. With AI, you have people making that narrative right now. It makes me wonder if these people really even respect humanity at all.

Yes, you can prod slippery slope and go from "superintelligent beings exist" to effectively totalitarianism, but you'll find so many bad commitments there.

NoMoreNicksLeftabout 2 hours ago
No one who read science fiction in 1955 would call any of the various models we know to be "artificial intelligence". They would be impressed with it, even excited at first that it was that... until they'd had a chance to evaluate it.

Science fiction from that era even had the concept of what models are... they'd call it an "oracle". I can think of at least 3 short stories (though remembering the authors just isn't happening for me at the moment). The concept was of a device that could provide correct answers to any question. But these devices had no agency, were dependent on framing the question correctly, and limited in other ways besides (I think in one story, the device might chew on a question for years before providing an answer... mirroring that time around 9am PST when Claude has to keep retrying to send your prompt).

We've always known what we meant by artificial intelligence, at least until a few years ago when we started pretending that we didn't. Perhaps the label was poorly chosen (all those decades ago) and could have a better label now (AGI isn't that better label, it's dumber still), but it's what we're stuck with. And we all know what we mean by it. We all almost certainly do not want that artificial intelligence because most of us are certain that it will spell the doom of our species.

Der_Einzigeabout 3 hours ago
Just don't move the goal posts. AGI was already here the day ChatGPT came out:

https://www.noemamag.com/artificial-general-intelligence-is-...

staticman2about 3 hours ago
If you didn't call GPT 3.5 AGI I do not believe you when you claim you would have called 5.5 AGI.
BloondAndDoomabout 3 hours ago
I agree with this but they don’t. And that’s the the thing, AGI as they refer is much much much more than what we have, and I don’t know if they are going to ever get there and I’m not sure what’s even there at this point and what will justify their investments.
3formabout 3 hours ago
... until you actually, like, use it and find out all the limitations it has.
vntokabout 3 hours ago
How is this relevant? Human General Intelligence has a lot of limitations as well and we have managed to do lots.
BoredPositronabout 3 hours ago
GPT 4 was 3 years ago... it's iterative enhancement.
freejazzabout 3 hours ago
And I've been told my job (litigation attorney) is about to be replaced for over 3 years now, has yet to come close.
BloondAndDoomabout 3 hours ago
People always over estimate the impact of technology because they dont Understand human aspect of many businesses. Will it eventually replaced or will the shape of these kind of work will be completely different in the future? That’s an easy yes, when is that future? That’s a big unknown, in my experience this kind of stuff takes at least a decade (and possibly more on this case) to make a big impact like replacing all of X.
nromiunabout 3 hours ago
If you present ELIZA to people some will think it is AGI today.

There is a reason so many scams happen with technology. It is too easy to fool people.

AntiUSAbahabout 3 hours ago
We are throwing unheared amounts of money in AI and unseen compute. Progress is huge and fast and we barely started.

If this progress and focus and resources doesn't lead to AI despite us already seeing a system which was unimaginable 6 years ago, we will never see AGI.

And if you look at Boston Dynamics, Unitree and Generalist's progress on robotics, thats also CRAZY.

mort96about 3 hours ago
If I'm reading you right, your opinion is essentially: "If building bigger and bigger statistical next word predictors won't lead to artificial general intelligence, we will never see artificial general intelligence"

I don't know, maybe AGI is possible but there's more to intelligence than statistical next word prediction?

AntiUSAbahabout 3 hours ago
Its not a statistical next word predictor.

The 'predicting the next word' is the learning mechanism of the LLM which leads to a latent space which can encode higher level concepts.

Basically a LLM 'understands' that much as efficient as it has to be to be able to respond in a reasonable way.

A LLM doesn't predict german text or chinese language. It predicts the concept and than has a language layer outputting tokens.

And its not just LLMs which are progressing fast, voice synt and voice understanding jumped significantly, motion detection, skeletion movement, virtual world generation (see nvidias way of generating virutal worlds for their car training), protein folding etc.

linhnsabout 2 hours ago
> And if you look at Boston Dynamics, Unitree and Generalist's progress on robotics

Their progress is almost nought. Humanoids are stupid creations that are not good at anything in the real world. I'll give it to the machine dogs, at least they can reach corners we cannot.

AntiUSAbah3 minutes ago
I found there demonstration at the CES this year very spectacular: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIhzUnvi7Fw

I can also recommend looking at Generalist: https://www.youtube.com/@Generalist_AI

benterixabout 3 hours ago
Not sure if you're being sincere or sarcastic but some of us have lived through several AI winters now. And the fact that such a phenomenon exists is because of this terrible amount of hype the topic gets whenever any progress is made.
AntiUSAbahabout 3 hours ago
Which ones? At least in the last 4 years, there was no AI winter.
turtlesdown11about 1 hour ago
> Progress is huge and fast

is it? we're currently scaled on data input and LLMs in general, the only thing making them advance at all right now is adding processing power

bmitcabout 3 hours ago
Same thing happened with self-driving cars. Oh and cryptocurrencies.
AntiUSAbahabout 3 hours ago
Self-driving had never the amount of compute, research adoption and money than what the current overall AI has. Its not comparable.

Crypto was flawed from the beginning and lots of people didn't understood it properly. Not even that a blockchain can't secure a transaction from something outside of a blockchain.

moi2388about 1 hour ago
Stop fucking linking paywalls ffs
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helsinkiandrewabout 6 hours ago
OpenAI post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47921262

Tried to delete this submission in place of it but too late.

dangabout 1 hour ago
Usually we prefer the best third-party article to corporate press releases (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&sor...) - I've put a link to the latter in the top text above.
freejazzabout 5 hours ago
Impossible to take any of this seriously when it constantly refers to AGI.
Schlagbohrerabout 5 hours ago
Especially when the OpenAI definition of AGI is only in financial terms (when it becomes profitable), which can be easily manipulated.
aliljetabout 5 hours ago
Why is this being made public?
brookstabout 5 hours ago
It’s an agreement between a public company and a highly scrutinized private company. Several of the provisions will change what happens in the marketplace, which everyone will see.

I imagine the thinking was that it’s better to just post it clearly than to have rumors and leaks and speculations that could hurt both companies (“should I risk using GCP for OpenAI models when it’s obviously against the MS / OpenAI agreement?”).

Schlagbohrerabout 5 hours ago
Also it's about OpenAI going public.
discordanceabout 2 hours ago
Might have something to do with the MSFT quarterly report tomorrow
shaguoerabout 2 hours ago
Interesting perspective. Would love to see more discussion on this.