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AGI talk is out in Silicon Valley’s latest vibe shift, but worries remain about superpowered AI

Sharon Goldman
By
Sharon Goldman
Sharon Goldman
AI Reporter
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Sharon Goldman
By
Sharon Goldman
Sharon Goldman
AI Reporter
Down Arrow Button Icon
August 25, 2025, 5:00 AM ET
Photo of Sam Altman on stage wearing a suit.
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI. As recently as earlier this year, Altman was eager to say that AGI appeared imminent. Now he says the term “AGI” itself is not useful. Nathan Laine—Bloomberg/Getty Images

Once upon a time—meaning, um, as recently as earlier this year—Silicon Valley couldn’t stop talking about AGI.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wrote in January: “We are now confident we know how to build AGI.” This is after he told a Y Combinator vodcast in late 2024 that AGI might be achieved in 2025 and tweeted in 2024 that OpenAI had “AGI achieved internally.” OpenAI was so AGI-entranced that its head of sales dubbed her team “AGI Sherpas” and its former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever led his fellow researchers in campfire chants of “Feel the AGI!”

OpenAI’s partner and major financial backer Microsoft put out a paper in 2024 claiming OpenAI’s GPT-4 AI model exhibited “sparks of AGI.” Meanwhile, Elon Musk founded xAI in March 2023 with a mission to build AGI, a development he said might occur as soon as 2025 or 2026. Demis Hassabis, the Nobel-laureate cofounder of Google DeepMind, told reporters that the world was “on the cusp” of AGI. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said his company was committed to “building full general intelligence” to power the next generation of its products and services. Dario Amodei, cofounder and CEO of Anthropic, while noting he disliked the term “AGI,” said “powerful AI” could arrive by 2027 and usher in a new age of health and abundance—if it didn’t wind up killing us all. Eric Schmidt, the former Google CEO turned prominent tech investor, said in a talk in April that we would have AGI “within three to five years.”

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Now the AGI fever is breaking—in what amounts to a wholesale vibe shift toward pragmatism as opposed to chasing utopian visions. For example, at a CNBC appearance this summer, Altman called AGI “not a super-useful term.” In the New York Times, Schmidt—yes that same guy who was talking up AGI in April—urged Silicon Valley to stop fixating on superhuman AI, warning that the obsession distracts from building useful technology. Both AI pioneer Andrew Ng and U.S. AI czar David Sacks called AGI “overhyped.”

AGI: Under-defined and overhyped

What happened? Well, first, a little background. Everyone agrees that AGI stands for “artificial general intelligence.” And that’s pretty much the only thing everyone agrees upon. People define the term in subtly, but importantly, different ways. Among the first to use the term was physicist Mark Avrum Gubrud who in a 1997 research article wrote that “by advanced artificial general intelligence, I mean AI systems that rival or surpass the human brain in complexity and speed, that can acquire, manipulate, and reason with general knowledge, and that are usable in essentially any phase of industrial or military operations where a human intelligence would otherwise be needed.”

The term was later picked up and popularized by AI researcher Shane Legg—who would go on to cofound Google DeepMind with Hassabis—and fellow computer scientists Ben Goertzel and Peter Voss in the early 2000s. They defined AGI, according to Voss, as an AI system that could learn to “reliably perform any cognitive task that a competent human can.” That definition had some problems—for instance, who decides who qualifies as a competent human? And, since then, other AI researchers have developed different definitions that see AGI as AI that is as capable as any human expert at all tasks, as opposed to merely a “competent” person. OpenAI was founded in late 2015 with the explicit mission of developing AGI “for the benefit of all,” and it added its own twist to the AGI definition debate. The company’s charter says AGI is an autonomous system that can “outperform humans at most economically valuable work.”

But whatever AGI is, the important thing these days, it seems, is not to talk about it. And the reason why has to do with growing concerns that progress in AI development may not be galloping ahead as fast as industry insiders touted just a few months ago—and growing indications that all the AGI talk was stoking inflated expectations that the tech itself couldn’t live up to.

Among the biggest factors in AGI’s sudden fall from grace, seems to have been the rollout of OpenAI’s GPT-5 model in early August. Just over two years after Microsoft’s claim that GPT-4 showed “sparks” of AGI, the new model landed with a thud: incremental improvements wrapped in a routing architecture, not the breakthrough many expected. Goertzel, who helped coin the term AGI, reminded the public that while GPT-5 is impressive, it remains nowhere near true AGI—lacking real understanding, continuous learning, or grounded experience. 

Altman’s retreat from AGI language is especially striking given his prior position. OpenAI was built on AGI hype: AGI is in the company’s founding mission, it helped raise billions in capital, and it underpins the partnership with Microsoft. A clause in their agreement even states that if OpenAI’s nonprofit board declares it has achieved AGI, Microsoft’s access to future technology would be restricted. Microsoft—after investing more than $13 billion—is reportedly pushing to remove that clause, and has even considered walking away from the deal. Wired also reported on an internal OpenAI debate over whether publishing a paper on measuring AI progress could complicate the company’s ability to declare it had achieved AGI. 

A ‘very healthy’ vibe shift

But whether observers think the vibe shift is a marketing move or a market response, many, particularly on the corporate side, say it is a good thing. Shay Boloor, chief market strategist at Futurum Equities, called the move “very healthy,” noting that markets reward execution, not vague “someday superintelligence” narratives. 

Others stress that the real shift is away from a monolithic AGI fantasy, toward domain-specific “superintelligences.” Daniel Saks, CEO of agentic AI company Landbase, argued that “the hype cycle around AGI has always rested on the idea of a single, centralized AI that becomes all-knowing,” but said that is not what he sees happening. “The future lies in decentralized, domain-specific models that achieve superhuman performance in particular fields,” he told Fortune.

Christopher Symons, chief AI scientist at digital health platform Lirio, said that the term AGI was never useful: Those promoting AGI, he explained, “draw resources away from more concrete applications where AI advancements can most immediately benefit society.” 

Still, the retreat from AGI rhetoric doesn’t mean the mission—or the phrase—has vanished. Anthropic and DeepMind executives continue to call themselves “AGI-pilled,” which is a bit of insider slang. Even that phrase is disputed, though; for some it refers to the belief that AGI is imminent, while others say it’s simply the belief that AI models will continue to improve. But there is no doubt that there is more hedging and downplaying than doubling down.

Some still call out urgent risks

And for some, that hedging is exactly what makes the risks more urgent. Former OpenAI researcher Steven Adler told Fortune: “We shouldn’t lose sight that some AI companies are explicitly aiming to build systems smarter than any human. AI isn’t there yet, but whatever you call this, it’s dangerous and demands real seriousness.”

Others accuse AI leaders of changing their tune on AGI to muddy the waters in a bid to avoid regulation. Max Tegmark, president of the Future of Life Institute, says Altman calling AGI “not a useful term” isn’t scientific humility, but a way for the company to steer clear of regulation while continuing to build toward more and more powerful models. 

“It’s smarter for them to just talk about AGI in private with their investors,” he told Fortune, adding that “it’s like a cocaine salesman saying that it’s unclear whether cocaine is really a drug,” because it’s just so complex and difficult to decipher. 

Call it AGI or call it something else—the hype may fade and the vibe may shift, but with so much on the line, from money and jobs to security and safety, the real questions about where this race leads are only just beginning.

In 2001, Fortune first convened the smartest people we know, bringing together CEOs and founders, builders and investors, thinkers and doers. Since then, Fortune Brainstorm Tech has been the place where bold ideas collide. From June 8–10, we will return to Aspen—where it all began—to mark 25 years of Brainstorm. Register now.
About the Author
Sharon Goldman
By Sharon GoldmanAI Reporter
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Sharon Goldman is an AI reporter at Fortune and co-authors Eye on AI, Fortune’s flagship AI newsletter. She has written about digital and enterprise tech for over a decade.

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