Sergey Brin’s Return to Google and the AI Revolution
Google co-founder Sergey Brin, previously believed to be in retirement after stepping back from Alphabet in 2019, is now frequently present at the company’s headquarters, actively engaged in its latest artificial intelligence projects. His call to fellow computer scientists is unmistakable: it is a crucial time for them to re-enter the arena.
During the Google I/O developer conference this week, Brin spoke alongside Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, conveying to Big Technology’s Alex Kantrowitz that “Honestly, anyone with a background in computer science shouldn’t consider retirement at this moment.” Brin indicated he is “pretty much at Google every day now” working on Gemini, the firm’s generative AI assistant and a flagship initiative from DeepMind, Alphabet’s prestigious AI lab.
Brin’s resurgence occurs amidst a dynamic surge of innovation in AI, partly ignited by OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT in 2022. With technology giants fiercely competing to create artificial general intelligence (AGI)—machines capable of performing human-like tasks—Brin insists that the current situation requires full participation. “There has never been a more significant challenge and opportunity — a greater pivot point in technology,” he remarked, underscoring that the speed and stakes of AI evolution surpass even those witnessed during the internet’s early development.
Nevertheless, the ongoing competition for AGI remains a prominent concern for Brin. “We fully aim for Gemini to be the very first AGI,” he affirmed, highlighting Google’s aspirations to spearhead the next phase of technological advancement.
Even during his so-called “retirement” years, Brin was hardly inactive; he invested in an airship startup (LTA Research), sponsored research on Parkinson’s disease, and explored real estate ventures. Now, with AI poised to create a monumental shift in societal norms and industrial practices, Brin states there is no other place he would prefer to be.