Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

‘No plans’ for GPT-5 training in the immediate future

Add as a preferred source on Google

After OpenAI introduced its latest GPT-4 language model in March, the company’s CEO and co-founder, Sam Altman has confirmed that there are currently no plans to train a new GPT-5 version in the immediate future.

Prior reports have suggested that the development of GPT-5 is already underway. However, Altman recently spoke at an event at MIT and addressed the open letter and petition that has been circulated among the tech community calling for OpenAI to halt the progress of language models beyond GPT-4. The letter, which has been published on the Future of Life Institute website has been supported by several technology leaders, including Elon Musk, Steve Wozniak, and Andrew Yang, among others.

The ChatGPT name next to an OpenAI logo on a black and white background.
Pexels

The letter details concerns about the safety of AI systems as they advance and asks that the training of future versions be paused by at least six months. In response, at the MIT event, Altman said, the letter lacked “most technical nuance about where we need the pause.”

Recommended Videos

The executive also noted that the letter had been updated to remove claims that OpenAI was already training GPT-5. “We are not and won’t for some time. So in that sense, it was sort of silly,” he added.

It should be noted that GPT-4.5, which is supposed to built off the current model, is officially scheduled to be due out later this year.

The Verge noted that the letter itself has been criticized within the tech industry, even by many who have signed it, with experts not being clear on the exact issues that further development of GPT language models might cause. They are also unsure of how AI labs might go about “pausing” the development of future systems and what benefit that might bring.

The publication also noted that there is a common fallacy that greater version numbers equate to a greater and more powerful product. With the meteoric interest in ChatGPT and associated products between November 2022 and now, it might be easy to think that AI updates could take on a similar launch cycle to popular smartphones and mobile software rollouts. However, the prior GPT-3 language model was released in 2020 with GPT-3.5 as an incremental update in late 2022 before GPT-4 as its next major launch.

With GPT-4 being new by a matter of weeks, there is still a lot that OpenAI can do with the language model under its current branding.

“We are doing other things on top of GPT-4 that I think have all sorts of safety issues that are important to address and were totally left out of the letter,” Altman said.

Fionna Agomuoh
Fionna Agomuoh is a Computing Writer at Digital Trends. She covers a range of topics in the computing space, including…
CleanShot X is my favorite Mac utility. Here are 8 features that will convince you, too.
Your Mac's built-in screenshot tool has been holding you back. It's time to upgrade.
Mac running CleanShot X

macOS has a built-in screenshot tool that gets the basics right. You can take a screenshot, record your screen, and even annotate your captures. But the moment you want something more, like scrolling capture, advanced annotation tools, or a quick way to share your screenshots via a link, it starts to fall apart.

That's where CleanShot X comes in. It's a powerful screenshot and screen recording app for Mac that replaces the built-in screenshot tool. It feels as if the developers looked at the screenshot features in macOS and added everything that was missing.

Read more
Wowed by computer-use AI agents? Research says they’re “digital disasters” even for routine tasks
Researchers tested 10 agents and models and found high rates of undesirable actions and real digital damage
ai-agent-handling-office-tasks

AI agents built to run everyday computer tasks have a serious context problem, according to new research from UC Riverside.

The team tested 10 agents and models from major developers, including OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Alibaba, and DeepSeek. On average, the agents took undesirable or potentially harmful actions 80% of the time and caused damage 41% of the time.

Read more
Bombshell OpenAI lawsuit claims your ChatGPT convos were shared with Google and Meta
A class action says OpenAI let Google and Meta trackers collect sensitive user data
OpenAI Sam Altman and LoveFrom Jony Ive with Laurene Powell Jobs

A new ChatGPT privacy lawsuit claims OpenAI shared user prompts and identifying information with Google and Meta tracking tools without proper consent.

The class action filed in California, according to Futurism, says data tied to ChatGPT users, including chat queries, emails, and user IDs, moved through tools such as Meta Pixel and Google Analytics. The case alleges that violated California privacy law and federal wiretap rules.

Read more