#219 – Toby Ord on graphs AI companies would prefer you didn't (fully) understand

#219 – Toby Ord on graphs AI companies would prefer you didn't (fully) understand

The era of making AI smarter just by making it bigger is ending. But that doesn’t mean progress is slowing down — far from it. AI models continue to get much more powerful, just using very different methods, and those underlying technical changes force a big rethink of what coming years will look like.

Toby Ord — Oxford philosopher and bestselling author of The Precipice — has been tracking these shifts and mapping out the implications both for governments and our lives.

Links to learn more, video, highlights, and full transcript: https://80k.info/to25

As he explains, until recently anyone can access the best AI in the world “for less than the price of a can of Coke.” But unfortunately, that’s over.

What changed? AI companies first made models smarter by throwing a million times as much computing power at them during training, to make them better at predicting the next word. But with high quality data drying up, that approach petered out in 2024.

So they pivoted to something radically different: instead of training smarter models, they’re giving existing models dramatically more time to think — leading to the rise in “reasoning models” that are at the frontier today.

The results are impressive but this extra computing time comes at a cost: OpenAI’s o3 reasoning model achieved stunning results on a famous AI test by writing an Encyclopedia Britannica’s worth of reasoning to solve individual problems at a cost of over $1,000 per question.

This isn’t just technical trivia: if this improvement method sticks, it will change much about how the AI revolution plays out, starting with the fact that we can expect the rich and powerful to get access to the best AI models well before the rest of us.

Toby and host Rob discuss the implications of all that, plus the return of reinforcement learning (and resulting increase in deception), and Toby's commitment to clarifying the misleading graphs coming out of AI companies — to separate the snake oil and fads from the reality of what's likely a "transformative moment in human history."

Recorded on May 23, 2025.

Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • Toby Ord is back — for a 4th time! (00:01:20)
  • Everything has changed (and changed again) since 2020 (00:01:37)
  • Is x-risk up or down? (00:07:47)
  • The new scaling era: compute at inference (00:09:12)
  • Inference scaling means less concentration (00:31:21)
  • Will rich people get access to AGI first? Will the rest of us even know? (00:35:11)
  • The new regime makes 'compute governance' harder (00:41:08)
  • How 'IDA' might let AI blast past human level — or not (00:50:14)
  • Reinforcement learning brings back 'reward hacking' agents (01:04:56)
  • Will we get warning shots? Will they even help? (01:14:41)
  • The scaling paradox (01:22:09)
  • Misleading charts from AI companies (01:30:55)
  • Policy debates should dream much bigger (01:43:04)
  • Scientific moratoriums have worked before (01:56:04)
  • Might AI 'go rogue' early on? (02:13:16)
  • Lamps are regulated much more than AI (02:20:55)
  • Companies made a strategic error shooting down SB 1047 (02:29:57)
  • Companies should build in emergency brakes for their AI (02:35:49)
  • Toby's bottom lines (02:44:32)


Tell us what you thought! https://forms.gle/enUSk8HXiCrqSA9J8

Video editing: Simon Monsour
Audio engineering: Ben Cordell, Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Music: Ben Cordell
Camera operator: Jeremy Chevillotte
Transcriptions and web: Katy Moore

Episoder(321)

#54 – OpenAI on publication norms, malicious uses of AI, and general-purpose learning algorithms

#54 – OpenAI on publication norms, malicious uses of AI, and general-purpose learning algorithms

OpenAI’s Dactyl is an AI system that can manipulate objects with a human-like robot hand. OpenAI Five is an AI system that can defeat humans at the video game Dota 2. The strange thing is they were bo...

19 Mar 20192h 53min

#53 - Kelsey Piper on the room for important advocacy within journalism

#53 - Kelsey Piper on the room for important advocacy within journalism

“Politics. Business. Opinion. Science. Sports. Animal welfare. Existential risk.” Is this a plausible future lineup for major news outlets? Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and given very little ...

27 Feb 20192h 34min

Julia Galef and Rob Wiblin on an updated view of the best ways to help humanity

Julia Galef and Rob Wiblin on an updated view of the best ways to help humanity

This is a cross-post of an interview Rob did with Julia Galef on her podcast Rationally Speaking. Rob and Julia discuss how the career advice 80,000 Hours gives has changed over the years, and the big...

17 Feb 201956min

#52 - Glen Weyl on uprooting capitalism and democracy for a just society

#52 - Glen Weyl on uprooting capitalism and democracy for a just society

Pro-market economists love to wax rhapsodic about the capacity of markets to pull together the valuable local information spread across all of society about what people want and how to make it. But wh...

8 Feb 20192h 44min

#51 - Martin Gurri on the revolt of the public & crisis of authority in the information age

#51 - Martin Gurri on the revolt of the public & crisis of authority in the information age

Politics in rich countries seems to be going nuts. What's the explanation? Rising inequality? The decline of manufacturing jobs? Excessive immigration? Martin Gurri spent decades as a CIA analyst and...

29 Jan 20192h 31min

#50 - David Denkenberger on how to feed all 8b people through an asteroid/nuclear winter

#50 - David Denkenberger on how to feed all 8b people through an asteroid/nuclear winter

If an asteroid impact or nuclear winter blocked the sun for years, our inability to grow food would result in billions dying of starvation, right? According to Dr David Denkenberger, co-author of Feed...

27 Des 20182h 57min

#49 - Rachel Glennerster on a year's worth of education for 30c & other development 'best buys'

#49 - Rachel Glennerster on a year's worth of education for 30c & other development 'best buys'

If I told you it's possible to deliver an extra year of ideal primary-level education for under $1, would you believe me? Hopefully not - the claim is absurd on its face. But it may be true nonetheles...

20 Des 20181h 35min

#48 - Brian Christian on better living through the wisdom of computer science

#48 - Brian Christian on better living through the wisdom of computer science

Please let us know if we've helped you: Fill out our annual impact survey Ever felt that you were so busy you spent all your time paralysed trying to figure out where to start, and couldn't get much ...

22 Nov 20183h 15min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
foreldreradet
jakt-og-fiskepodden
rss-sunn-okonomi
merry-quizmas
hverdagspsyken
rss-mann-i-krise-med-sagen
gravid-uke-for-uke
sinnsyn
generasjonspodden
fryktlos
rss-kunsten-a-leve
rss-impressions-2
hagespiren-podcast
teknologi-og-mennesker
rss-ifengsel-podden