> The path to AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) must never be enclosed by high walls. We have always believed that AGI should be the cornerstone for all of humanity to collaboratively explore the boundaries of intelligence and solve complex challenges, rather than a privilege monopolized by a few rules and subject to revocation at any moment.
This is not obvious to me. If everyone gets access to AGI, but only a few people have the means to do really bad things with it, then what is the difference? Might as well make clear from the start that AGI is a powerful tool (read: weapon), and not a solution (e.g. world peace).
The printing press gave us the renaissance, even though the church argued it was too dangerous to give non-clergy access to books.
Even things like universal access to guns was a net positive. It led to the end of feudalism and rise of democracy.
The sad truth is that whenever any one group of people gets a monopoly over an important technology, they use it to exploit/enslave/murder everyone they can. Look at the international news for examples from 2026.
Since the Renaissance got started before the printing press, maybe you mean the press fueled it? The idea that the church found printing dangerous seems like a conflation with events that happened during the Protestant Reformation. The Catholic Church did censor works it found heretical, including unauthorized Bible translations.
One could argue the opposite conclusion, that technology helps break monopolies, but either view depends on reductionist historical readings. The truth is somewhere in between.
Restricting things like creation of a highly infectious virus is very different from restricting books or even guns. There is no 'monopoly' over such a technology, as a use of the technology will inevitably harm the creators themselves.
Restrictions on high end biology, chemistry would leave overwhelming number of use cases of LLMs unaffected - no need to ban open weight LLMs. Such restrictions can be even more effective, if it is coupled to researchers getting early access to see the possible problems and have an opportunity to prevent the outbreak or create new vaccines well in advance.
Restrictions are not enabling monopolies. The opposite is true, if a LLM engineered virus or other harmful technology is let loose, public opinion can very quickly swing towards draconian regulation. (see nuclear power after Chernobyl).
Restricting access helps even less.
And none of this is AGI so...
How do you define AGI these days?
I don't have a fully perfect definition, but I can name a couple of requirements.
Ironically, both reasoning and agency are required, neither of which our "reasoning agents" possess.
Are you unironically claiming that LLM's can't reason? That's an absolutely wild claim in an era where they're solving Erdos problems and writing better code than many senior devs. What's the basis for it?
Agency is harder to define, but most any definition I can come up with LLM's meet. Again, I'm curious how you define it in a way that excludes frontier models but doesn't also exclude many humans.