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Home » ‘AJI’ Is the Precursor to ‘AGI,’ Google CEO Sundar Pichai Says
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‘AJI’ Is the Precursor to ‘AGI,’ Google CEO Sundar Pichai Says

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIAJune 7, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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Progress is rarely linear, and AI is no exception.

As academics, independent developers, and the biggest tech companies in the world drive us closer to artificial general intelligence — a still hypothetical form of intelligence that matches human capabilities — they’ve hit some roadblocks. Many emerging models are prone to hallucinating, misinformation, and simple errors.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai referred to this phase of AI as AJI, or “artificial jagged intelligence,” on a recent episode of Lex Fridman’s podcast.

“I don’t know who used it first, maybe Karpathy did,” Pichai said, referring to deep learning and computer vision specialist Andrej Karpathy, who cofounded OpenAI before leaving last year.

AJI is a bit of a metaphor for the trajectory of AI development — jagged, marked at once by sparks of genius and basic mistakes.

“You see what they can do and then you can trivially find they make numerical errors or counting R’s in strawberry or something, which seems to trip up most models,” Pichai said. “I feel like we are in the AJI phase where dramatic progress, some things don’t work well, but overall, you’re seeing lots of progress.”

In 2010, when Google DeepMind launched, its team would talk about a 20-year timeline for AGI, Pichai said. Google subsequently acquired DeepMind in 2014. Pichai thinks it’ll take a little longer than that, but by 2030, “I would stress it doesn’t matter what that definition is because you will have mind-blowing progress on many dimensions.”

By then the world will also need a clear system for labeling AI-generated content to “distinguish reality,” he said.

“Progress” is a vague term, but Pichai has spoken at length about the benefits we’ll see from AI development. At the UN’s Summit of the Future in September 2024, he outlined four specific ways that AI would advance humanity — improving access to knowledge in native languages, accelerating scientific discovery, mitigating climate disaster, and contributing to economic progress.

But, first, it needs to learn to spell “strawberry.”



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