Google CEO: AI development is finally slowing down—’the low-hanging fruit is gone’

Google CEO: AI development is finally slowing down—’the low-hanging fruit is gone’


Generative artificial intelligence probably won’t change your life in 2025 — at least, not more than it already has, according to Google CEO Sundar Pichai.

When OpenAI launched ChatGPT two years ago, generative AI quickly captured the imagination of users around the world. Now, with the industry’s competitive landscape somewhat established — multiple big tech companies, including Google, have competing models — it’ll take time for another technological breakthrough to shock the AI industry into hyper-speed development again, Pichai said at the New York Times’ DealBook Summit last week.

“I think the progress is going to get harder. When I look at [2025], the low-hanging fruit is gone,” said Pichai, adding: “The hill is steeper … You’re definitely going to need deeper breakthroughs as we get to the next stage.”

DON’T MISS: The ultimate guide to earning passive income online

Current language models — like ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini or Meta’s Llama — will keep getting incrementally better, particularly “at reasoning, completing a sequence of actions more reliably,” Pichai said. Those improvements could help push AI closer to generating profits for corporate users — which isn’t happening yet, despite investments in the technology that are expected to surpass $1 trillion “in coming years,” according to a recent Goldman Sachs report.

But another seismic shift that changes the way most people think about or envision AI is unlikely to happen within the next year, said Pichai.

Some tech CEOs, like Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, agree with Pichai. “Seventy years of the Industrial Revolution, there wasn’t much industry growth, and then it took off … it’s never going to be linear,” Nadella said at the Fast Company Innovation Festival 2024 in October.

Others disagree, at least publicly. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, for example, posted “there is no wall” on social media platform X in November — a response to reports that the recently released ChatGPT-4 was only moderately better than previous models.

AI’s progress isn’t exactly walled off, Pichai said: Even incremental development will help hone the technology, making it increasingly more useful for a wider swath of people. Some industry jobs that don’t require college degrees can pay well: On average, AI trainers make more than $64,000 per year, and prompt engineers make more than $110,000, according to ZipRecruiter.

“I think 10 years from now, [computer programming] will be accessible to millions more people,” said Pichai.

Want to make extra money outside of your day job? Sign up for CNBC’s online course How to Earn Passive Income Online to learn about common passive income streams, tips to get started and real-life success stories.

Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It’s newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.

How In-N-Out turned a $4 burger into $2 billion a year



Source

Goldman Sachs is tapping Anthropic’s AI model to automate accounting, compliance roles
World

Goldman Sachs is tapping Anthropic’s AI model to automate accounting, compliance roles

Goldman Sachs has been working with the artificial intelligence startup Anthropic to create AI agents to automate a growing number of roles within the bank, the firm’s tech chief told CNBC exclusively. The bank has, for the past six months, been working with embedded Anthropic engineers to co-develop autonomous agents in at least two specific […]

Read More
Toyota promotes finance chief Kenta Kon as CEO in second leadership change in 3 years
World

Toyota promotes finance chief Kenta Kon as CEO in second leadership change in 3 years

A Toyota dealership is seen on November 19, 2025 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell | Getty Images Toyota Motor announced Friday that Chief Executive Officer Koji Sato will step down and be replaced by its Chief Financial Officer, Kenta Kon, marking the automaker’s second CEO transition in three years. The leadership shakeup will take effect […]

Read More
Stellantis to take  billion hit overhauling its business after ‘over-estimating the pace of the energy transition’
World

Stellantis to take $26 billion hit overhauling its business after ‘over-estimating the pace of the energy transition’

Automaker Stellantis said on Friday it expects to take a roughly 22-billion-euro ($26 billion) hit as it overhauls its business to accelerate the rollout of electric and hybrid vehicles. The Jeep maker also pre-released some figures for the fourth quarter, saying it anticipates a net loss for 2025. In recognition of that net loss, it […]

Read More