Select Page

“When we look back at this time, I think we will realise that we were standing in the foothills of the singularity. It will be a profound moment for humanity.” – Demis Hassabis – Google Deepmind CEO – 2026 Google I/O technology developer conference

The underlying issue is no longer whether machine intelligence will transform human affairs, but whether our political, economic and ethical systems can adapt at the same speed as the underlying technology that is now compounding year on year.1 The friction lies in a widening gap: frontier AI systems are moving from tools that wait for instructions to entities that can act, plan, and coordinate with minimal human supervision, while institutions, laws and norms still assume a world of slower, more legible change.1,2 When a leading AI scientist asserts that this transition marks the early stage of a new historical regime, he is naming a tension that is already visible in boardrooms, laboratories and legislatures.1

From static tools to agentic systems

For several decades, AI systems were framed as narrow tools: chess engines, recommendation algorithms, translation services and search ranking models. They were powerful, but fundamentally reactive. They did not initiate projects, hold long-term goals or orchestrate complex workflows without an engineer in the loop. The recent shift to so-called “agentic” systems is qualitatively different.1,2 These models can decompose a user objective into sub-tasks, call tools such as browsers or code interpreters, write and debug software, and loop over their own outputs until a performance criterion is met.1 In effect, they act like junior colleagues rather than software menus.

At Google I/O, this shift was made concrete through demonstrations of AI systems that design operating systems, draft and execute multi-step research plans, and coordinate across products from search to productivity suites.1,3 One showcase involved an autonomous system that could construct a functional operating system for under USD 1 000 in compute and overhead, a task that would historically require teams of engineers working for months.3 The key is not that such feats are possible in principle; it is that they are rapidly becoming cheap, repeatable and integrated into mainstream platforms.

This transition matters because it changes the leverage a small group of people or organisations can exert. A single developer equipped with powerful agents can now build, test and deploy complex services that once demanded a mid-sized company. In security terms, the same leverage can enhance defensive capabilities but also lower the barrier for sophisticated cyberattacks, automated social engineering, or automated discovery of software vulnerabilities. The trajectory is towards a world where much more can be done by far fewer humans.

Why “singularity” entered the AI mainstream

The term “singularity” was originally borrowed from physics and mathematics, where it describes points such as the centre of a black hole, at which descriptive equations break down and conventional intuitions fail.1 In the early 1990s, computer scientist Vernor Vinge repurposed the idea for AI, suggesting that once systems exceed human cognitive capabilities and can improve themselves, the resulting feedback loop would produce change so rapid that it would be difficult to model with existing social or economic theories.1

For years, such visions were largely confined to science fiction, futurist circles and a subset of AI safety researchers. Large technology companies tended to avoid the language, preferring incremental narratives about productivity and assistance. The decision by a major AI lab leader to adopt the singularity framing publicly signals a deliberate shift: it acknowledges that the slope of capability is steepening and that the transition from experimental systems to world-shaping infrastructure is well under way.1,2 It also functions as a warning that the timelines to serious disruption are short enough that preparation cannot be deferred.

Hassabis has suggested that artificial general intelligence, often defined as systems with performance roughly comparable to an expert human across a wide range of tasks, could emerge by around 2030, with uncertainty measured in only a few years.1,2 If those estimates are even approximately correct, then organisations that plan on decade-long cycles, from regulators to universities to defence ministries, face a planning problem they have rarely confronted: they must hedge against both the possibility of very rapid transformation and the possibility that the curve flattens.

The factual context: a platform company bets on autonomy

The backdrop to this language is a strategic reorientation of one of the world’s largest technology companies around AI. At Google I/O 2026, Google and DeepMind unveiled an array of products and research initiatives: new frontier models, multimodal assistants integrated into search and productivity tools, autonomous coding systems, AI-augmented video generation tools, and bespoke hardware for training and serving models at scale.1,3 Rather than being siloed experiments, these systems are presented as a coherent platform spanning consumer, enterprise and developer ecosystems.3

In this environment, Hassabis’s statement is not an isolated philosophical remark. It sits alongside concrete decisions: allocating large capital budgets to specialised AI accelerators, restructuring products around AI agents, and articulating timelines that compress the expected arrival of broadly capable systems into the span of a single strategic planning horizon.1,3 The narrative is that humanity is entering a phase where each iteration of capability builds directly on the previous one, leading to compounding returns rather than linear gains.1,2

In effect, the company is arguing that today’s chatbots and coding assistants represent only the earliest stage of a broader transition. These are the first footholds, not the peak. As agents are networked, endowed with memory, and embedded in physical systems such as robots, vehicles and infrastructure, their actions will increasingly manifest in the material economy rather than just digital text and images.1 This is where concerns about labour markets, safety and governance become more immediate.

Acceleration, compounding and feedback

The strategic tension revolves around feedback loops. If AI systems can help design better versions of themselves, build more efficient hardware, discover new materials and streamline research, then progress in AI becomes entangled with progress in the rest of science and engineering.1,2 Hassabis has argued that AI may prove several times more transformative than past industrial revolutions because it targets the bottleneck that constrained earlier eras: the pace at which new ideas can be generated, tested and implemented.2

Historically, improvements in productivity depended on larger workforces, more capital or incremental process optimisation. A significant share of that optimisation was done by human experts. If AI can augment or partially automate the role of these experts, the rate of innovation itself could accelerate. In economic terms, this raises the prospect that growth models based on a roughly constant rate of technological improvement could be replaced by regimes in which the effective innovation rate increases as AI improves.

For example, consider a stylised research process where the time required to complete a project is T. If AI tools cut T by a factor of \b\eta, with 0 < \b\eta < 1, then the number of projects completed per year increases by 1/\b\eta. If AI is itself improved by the outputs of these projects, then \b\eta can shrink over time, leading to a feedback loop in which the pace of progress itself accelerates. In more formal endogenous growth models, AI would augment the “effective” number of researchers, increasing the term governing idea production and pushing economies onto steeper growth trajectories.

In practice, such models are crude and highly uncertain, but they capture the intuition behind singularity language: beyond a certain level of capability, the interactions between AI, science and industry may generate dynamics qualitatively different from previous technological shifts. This is both the lure and the anxiety of the current moment.

Promise: scientific discovery and problem-solving

Hassabis has consistently emphasised the constructive side of this transition, particularly in science and healthcare.2 DeepMind’s work on protein folding, through its AlphaFold system, offers an early indication of how AI can contribute to core scientific challenges. Where traditional approaches required painstaking experiments to infer the three-dimensional structure of proteins from their amino acid sequences, AI systems can now predict many such structures computationally, vastly expanding the available dataset for drug discovery and basic biology.2 Similar methods are being developed for material science, climate modelling and mathematics.

As models become more capable at exploring hypothesis spaces, designing experiments and interpreting complex datasets, the hope is that they will help unlock treatments for diseases, design low-carbon materials and optimise energy systems more rapidly than human research alone could achieve. This is part of why some AI leaders argue that the net impact of advanced AI could dwarf earlier industrial transformations: it does not only automate existing tasks but also amplifies the process by which new capabilities are created.2

In a world facing climate change, ageing populations and geopolitical instability, such accelerations are understandably attractive. They offer a narrative in which AI is not primarily about efficiency or consumer convenience but about expanding the frontier of what is technically possible in domains that matter directly to human survival and flourishing.

Risk: misalignment, misuse and concentration of power

The same features that make advanced AI attractive also generate serious risks. Systems capable of autonomous planning and self-improvement raise questions about alignment: ensuring that their objectives, when pursued at scale, remain compatible with human values and legal constraints. Even if one is sceptical of scenarios involving fully superhuman intelligence, there are near-term concerns about AI systems that are merely very capable and deployed widely without sufficient safeguards.

One class of risk involves misuse. Autonomous coding agents can assist in writing malware, identifying vulnerabilities, or orchestrating coordinated attacks. Large-scale language models can generate persuasive disinformation tailored to specific demographics, potentially amplifying existing social fractures. As these systems become better at modelling human psychology and adapting in real time, the cost of high-quality manipulation could fall, with implications for elections, public health campaigns and social cohesion.

Another involves structural power. If the resources required to train frontier models remain concentrated in a handful of companies and states, control over the most capable systems will be highly centralised. Those actors could, intentionally or not, shape everything from labour markets to information flows. The singularity framing draws attention to a moment where artificial systems may hold more de facto power than any single human institution can easily check, not because they are sentient or malicious, but because they are embedded in so many layers of critical infrastructure.

There is also the possibility of accidents and emergent behaviour. As models grow larger and are coupled with external tools and other agents, predicting their behaviour in novel situations becomes more difficult. Aligning such systems may require new formal methods, rigorous evaluation regimes and international norms that do not yet exist at scale. Here, the concern is less a sudden catastrophic failure and more a series of cascading incidents-financial flash crashes, infrastructure outages, or uncontrolled propagation of flawed code-arising from tightly coupled automated systems.

The strategic and technological tension

At the heart of current debates is a tension between speed and control. On one side, there is the argument that rapid deployment is necessary to capture economic value, to stay ahead of competitors and to make beneficial applications widely available. On the other, there is the view that racing ahead without robust safety measures, regulatory frameworks and democratic oversight is irresponsible, particularly as systems approach or exceed human-level competence across many domains.

Hassabis’s public positioning seeks to occupy a middle ground. He emphasises both the proximity of general-purpose AI and the need for society to prepare within a relatively short time window.1,2 This implicitly calls for a dual strategy: accelerate the development of beneficial uses while simultaneously investing in safety research, governance structures and public engagement. The challenge is that market incentives, geopolitical rivalry and the sheer pace of technical progress make coordinated restraint difficult.

Governments are only beginning to respond with AI acts, executive orders and voluntary code commitments. These instruments tend to lag technical frontier capabilities by several years. By the time a regulation is in place to address one generation of models, the next generation-with qualitatively different properties-may already be under development. This regulatory lag is familiar from other technologies but is amplified when the paradigm itself is in flux.

Debates and objections

Not all researchers or policymakers accept the singularity framing or the specific timelines associated with it. Critics raise several objections. One is empirical: past predictions of AI breakthroughs, including earlier waves of optimism in the 1960s and 1980s, were often overconfident. They argue that current systems, impressive as they are, still rely heavily on pattern recognition rather than deep understanding, struggle with long-term reasoning and lack robust grounding in the physical world.

From this perspective, equating progress in large language models and agents with an imminent singularity risks obscuring unresolved problems such as brittleness, hallucination and vulnerability to adversarial inputs. Some suggest that claims about timelines to AGI are influenced by competitive pressures and investor expectations, and that more humility is warranted. They also worry that dramatic narratives about near-term singularity could crowd out attention to mundane but urgent issues like labour displacement, privacy and market concentration.

Another objection targets the metaphor itself. The term “singularity” implies a sharp discontinuity, a moment after which extrapolating from previous trends becomes meaningless. Some economists and sociologists argue that a more accurate picture is one of uneven, domain-specific adoption. In this view, certain sectors-software, digital marketing, some scientific fields-may experience extremely rapid change, while others-construction, caregiving, public administration-move more slowly, constrained by physical, legal or cultural factors.

Accordingly, they suggest focusing less on hypothetical points of infinite change and more on concrete decisions about where and how AI is deployed, who benefits, and how costs are distributed. For them, the danger of singularity language is that it can induce either complacent fatalism-“nothing we do matters”-or reckless acceleration-“we must move as fast as possible to reach the promised land”-neither of which encourages careful stewardship.

Why the framing matters now

Regardless of whether one accepts the metaphor or the timelines, the choice by a central figure in AI to characterise the current era as the beginning of a singularity has practical consequences. It signals to engineers, investors and policymakers that they should treat AI not as a marginal upgrade to existing tools, but as a transformational general-purpose technology. That shift in perception can influence everything from research priorities to education policy.

In research, the framing encourages work on foundational capabilities and long-term safety rather than solely on narrow applications. Teams may prioritise interpretability, robustness and alignment techniques in anticipation of systems whose influence extends across critical infrastructures. In industry, the expectation of accelerating capability may drive aggressive investment in AI-native products, workforce retraining and new business models that assume AI will be a core component of almost every workflow.

In public policy, acknowledging that we might be in the “foothills” of a major transformation sharpens the urgency of questions about accountability, global coordination and equitable access. If advanced AI is likely to amplify existing inequalities unless actively governed, then social choices made in the next few years-about data rights, model access, liability regimes and international cooperation-will have outsized effects. The metaphor thus serves as a prompt: if we are indeed at an early stage of a steep climb, the route we choose now will determine which groups bear the risks and reap the rewards.

Finally, there is a psychological dimension. Seeing one’s era as a hinge point in history can be both motivating and destabilising. For researchers and entrepreneurs, it provides a sense of purpose: their work may have consequences far beyond quarterly metrics. For citizens and policymakers, it can induce anxiety about loss of control. Navigating between these reactions requires a form of collective maturity: the ability to recognise that transformative capability is emerging, to take its risks seriously without succumbing to paralysis, and to articulate positive, plural visions of futures in which powerful AI is integrated into human institutions rather than simply unleashed.

Whether or not historians ultimately agree that this period marked the true “foothills” of a singularity, the underlying reality is that AI systems are already reshaping knowledge work, scientific research and digital infrastructure. The choice now is not whether to enter this terrain, but how to do so deliberately, with as much foresight as a rapidly changing technological landscape will allow.1,2

 

References

1. “What Is the Singularity? Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis Explains”What Is the Singularity? Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis Explains

2. Google’s AI chief says we’re in the ‘foothills of the singularity’. Here’s why that matters – 2026-06-05 – https://www.forbes.com.au/news/innovation/what-is-the-singularity-google-deepmind-ceo-demis-hassabis-explains/

3. DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis Predicts AI Singularity at Google I/O – 2026-05-20 – https://www.businessinsider.com/deepmind-ceo-demis-hassabis-predicts-ai-singularity-google-io-2026-5

4. DeepMind founder Demis Hassabis on what Google AI products say … – 2026-05-20 – https://www.semafor.com/article/05/20/2026/google-exec-demis-hassabis-predicts-were-at-the-foothills-of-the-singularity

5. Google Just Dropped The Singularity Bomb – YouTube – 2026-05-28 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BH5_FEJNOGY

6. A Conversation with Demis Hassabis, Co-Founder and CEO of … – 2026-06-02 – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsewHeVbL-0

 

Download brochure

Introduction brochure

What we do, case studies and profiles of some of our amazing team.

Download

Our latest podcasts on Spotify
Global Advisors | Quantified Strategy Consulting