Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    SEC drops lawsuit against Winklevoss twins’ Gemini crypto exchange

    January 24, 2026

    Why Pancreatic Cancer Is So Deadly: New Study Reveals Hidden Invasion Pathway

    January 24, 2026

    Former Googlers seek to captivate kids with an AI-powered learning app

    January 24, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Tech
    • Gadgets
    • Spotlight
    • Gaming
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    iGadgets TechiGadgets Tech
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Gadgets
    • Insights
    • Apps

      Google Uses AI Searches To Detect If Someone Is In Crisis

      April 2, 2022

      Gboard Magic Wand Button Will Covert Your Text To Emojis

      April 2, 2022

      Android 10 & Older Devices Now Getting Automatic App Permissions Reset

      April 2, 2022

      Spotify Blend Update Increases Group Sizes, Adds Celebrity Blends

      April 2, 2022

      Samsung May Improve Battery Significantly With Galaxy Watch 5

      April 2, 2022
    • Gear
    • Mobiles
      1. Tech
      2. Gadgets
      3. Insights
      4. View All

      Why Pancreatic Cancer Is So Deadly: New Study Reveals Hidden Invasion Pathway

      January 24, 2026

      This Type of Exercise Is Most Effective at Reducing Body Fat in Older Adults

      January 24, 2026

      Autistic Faces Show Emotion Differently And That’s Not a Deficit

      January 24, 2026

      Scientists Solve a 66-Million-Year-Old Climate Mystery That Changed Earth Forever

      January 24, 2026

      March Update May Have Weakened The Haptics For Pixel 6 Users

      April 2, 2022

      Project 'Diamond' Is The Galaxy S23, Not A Rollable Smartphone

      April 2, 2022

      The At A Glance Widget Is More Useful After March Update

      April 2, 2022

      Pre-Order The OnePlus 10 Pro For Just $1 In The US

      April 2, 2022

      This Autonomous Aquatic Robot Is Smaller Than a Grain of Salt

      January 24, 2026

      Gear News of the Week: Apple’s AI Wearable and a Phone That Can Boot Android, Linux, and Windows

      January 24, 2026

      DOGE May Have Misused Social Security Data, DOJ Admits

      January 24, 2026

      3 Best Cheap Gaming Laptops (2026): WIRED-Tested and Approved

      January 24, 2026

      Latest Huawei Mobiles P50 and P50 Pro Feature Kirin Chips

      January 15, 2021

      Samsung Galaxy M62 Benchmarked with Galaxy Note10’s Chipset

      January 15, 2021
      9.1

      Review: T-Mobile Winning 5G Race Around the World

      January 15, 2021
      8.9

      Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Review: the New King of Android Phones

      January 15, 2021
    • Computing
    iGadgets TechiGadgets Tech
    Home»Spotlight»A new test for AI labs: Are you even trying to make money?
    Spotlight

    A new test for AI labs: Are you even trying to make money?

    adminBy adminJanuary 24, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Ilya Sutskever-open ai
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    We’re in a unique moment for AI companies building their own foundation model.

    First, there is a whole generation of industry veterans who made their name at major tech companies and are now going solo. You also have legendary researchers with immense experience but ambiguous commercial aspirations. There’s a clear chance that at least some of these new labs will become OpenAI-sized behemoths, but there’s also room for them to putter around doing interesting research without worrying too much about commercialization.

    The end result? It’s getting hard to tell who is actually trying to make money. 

    To make things simpler, I’m proposing a kind of sliding scale for any company making a foundation model. It’s a five-level scale where it doesn’t matter if you’re actually making money – only if you’re trying to. The idea here is to measure ambition, not success. 

    Think of it in these terms: 

    • Level 5: We are already making millions of dollars every day, thank you very much. 
    • Level 4: We have a detailed multi-stage plan to become the richest human beings on Earth. 
    • Level 3: We have many promising product ideas, which will be revealed in the fullness of time. 
    • Level 2: We have the outlines of a concept of a plan. 
    • Level 1: True wealth is when you love yourself. 

    The big names are all at Level 5: OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, and so on. The scale gets more interesting with the new generation of labs launching now, with big dreams but ambitions that can be harder to read. 

    Crucially, the people involved in these labs can generally choose whatever level they want. There’s so much money in AI right now that no one is going to interrogate them for a business plan. Even if the lab is just a research project, investors will count themselves happy to be involved. If you aren’t particularly motivated to become a billionaire, you might well live a happier life at Level 2 than at Level 5. 

    Techcrunch event

    San Francisco
    |
    October 13-15, 2026

    The problems arise because it isn’t always clear where an AI lab lands on the scale — and a lot of the AI industry’s current drama comes from that confusion. Much of the anxiety over OpenAI’s conversion from a non-profit came because the lab spent years at Level 1, then jumped to Level 5 almost overnight. On the other side, you might argue that Meta’s early AI research was firmly at Level 2, when what the company really wanted was Level 4. 

    With that in mind, here’s a quick rundown of four of the biggest contemporary AI labs, and how they measure up on the scale. 

    Humans& 

    Humans& was the big AI news this week, and part of the inspiration for coming up with this whole scale. The founders have a compelling pitch for the next generation of AI models, with scaling laws giving way to an emphasis on communication and coordination tools.  

    But for all the glowing press, Humans& has been coy about how that would translate into actual monetizable products. It seems it does want to build products; the team just won’t commit to anything specific. The most they’ve said is that they will be building some kind of AI workplace tool, replacing products like Slack, Jira and Google Docs but also redefining how these other tools work at a fundamental level. Workplace software for a post-software workplace! 

    It’s my job to know what this stuff means, and I’m still pretty confused about that last part. But it is just specific enough that I think we can put them at Level 3. 

    Thinking Machines Lab 

    This is a very hard one to rate! Generally, if you have a former CTO and project lead for ChatGPT raising a $2 billion seed round, you have to assume there is a pretty specific roadmap. Mira Murati does not strike me as someone who jumps in without a plan, so coming into 2026, I would have felt good putting TML at Level 4. 

    But then the last two weeks happened. The departure of CTO and co-founder Barret Zoph has gotten most of the headlines, due in part to the special circumstances involved. But at least five other employees left with Zoph, many citing concerns about the direction of the company. Just one year in, nearly half the executives on TML’s founding team are no longer working there. One way to read events is that they thought they had a solid plan to become a world-class AI lab, only to find the plan wasn’t as solid as they thought. Or in terms of the scale, they wanted a Level 4 lab but realized they were at Level 2 or 3. 

    There still isn’t quite enough evidence to justify a downgrade, but it’s getting close. 

    World Labs 

    Fei-Fei Li is one of the most respected names in AI research, best known for establishing the ImageNet challenge that kickstarted contemporary deep learning techniques. She currently holds a Sequoia-endowed chair at Stanford, where she co-directs two different AI labs. I won’t bore you by going through all the different honors and academy positions, but it’s enough to say that if she wanted, she could spend the rest of her life just receiving awards and being told how great she is. Her book is pretty good too! 

    So in 2024, when Li announced she had raised $230 million for a spatial AI company called World Labs, you might think we were operating at Level 2 or lower. 

    But that was over a year ago, which is a long time in the AI world. Since then, World Labs has shipped both a full world-generating model and a commercialized product built on top of it. Over the same period, we’ve seen real signs of demand for world-modeling from both video game and special effects industries — and none of the major labs have built anything that can compete. The result looks an awful lot like a Level 4 company, perhaps soon to graduate to Level 5.

    Safe Superintelligence (SSI) 

    Founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, Safe Superintelligence (or SSI) seems like a classic example of a Level 1 startup. Sutskever has gone to great lengths to keep SSI insulated from commercial pressures, to the point of turning down an attempted acquisition from Meta. There are no product cycles and, aside from the still-baking superintelligent foundation model, there doesn’t seem to be any product at all. With this pitch, he raised $3 billion! Sutskever has always been more interested in the science of AI than the business, and every indication is that this is a genuinely scientific project at heart.  

    That said, the AI world moves fast — and it would be foolish to count SSI out of the commercial realm entirely. On his recent Dwarkesh appearance, Sutskever gave two reasons why SSI might pivot, either “if timelines turned out to be long, which they might” or because “there is a lot of value in the best and most powerful AI being out there impacting the world.” In other words, if the research either goes very well or very badly, we might see SSI jump up a few levels in a hurry. 

    AI,safe superintelligence,World Labs,Thinking Machines Lab,foundation models,humans&safe superintelligence,World Labs,Thinking Machines Lab,foundation models,humans&#test #labs #money1769276503

    foundation models Humans Labs money safe superintelligence Test Thinking Machines Lab World Labs
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    admin
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    SEC drops lawsuit against Winklevoss twins’ Gemini crypto exchange

    January 24, 2026

    Former Googlers seek to captivate kids with an AI-powered learning app

    January 24, 2026

    How PopWheels helped a food cart ditch generators for e-bike batteries

    January 24, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks

    McKinsey tests AI chatbot in early stages of graduate recruitment

    January 15, 2026

    Bosch’s €2.9 billion AI investment and shifting manufacturing priorities

    January 8, 2026
    8.5

    Apple Planning Big Mac Redesign and Half-Sized Old Mac

    January 5, 2021

    Autonomous Driving Startup Attracts Chinese Investor

    January 5, 2021
    Top Reviews
    9.1

    Review: T-Mobile Winning 5G Race Around the World

    By admin
    8.9

    Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Review: the New King of Android Phones

    By admin
    8.9

    Xiaomi Mi 10: New Variant with Snapdragon 870 Review

    By admin
    Advertisement
    Demo
    iGadgets Tech
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
    • Home
    • Tech
    • Gadgets
    • Mobiles
    • Our Authors
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by WPfastworld.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.