Has OpenAI given up GPT-5? The slide suggests that it may no longer use numbers for naming

The following is a machine translation from the original text

OpenAI may abandon numbers when naming next-generation artificial intelligence models, at least as suggested in a recent speech in Paris.

During a presentation of ChatGPT Voice at the VivaTech conference, Romain Huet, director of developer experience for OpenAI, showed a slide that revealed potential growth in artificial intelligence models in the next few years, but GPT-5 did not appear in it.

It shows the GPT-3 era, the GPT-4 era, and the “Today” between it and GPT-Next. Although I doubt the next generation model will carry the moniker, it suggests that the company is abandoning the GPT-5 brand. This is also consistent with the fact that CEO Sam Altman was cautious in a recent interview about when the model would be launched.

What’s in the name?

Naming remains a confusing matter in the artificial intelligence world, as companies seek to stand out from the crowd while maintaining their hacking credentials.

We have Grok, a chatbot from xAI, and Groq, a new inference engine, which is also a chatbot. Then we have OpenAI with ChatGPT, Sora, Speech Engine, DALL-E, etc.

Huet even said in his speech on Wednesday that we will see OpenAI models in multiple size in the months and years to come, not just one model suitable for ChatGPT and other products.

With the release of GPT-3 and ChatGPT, OpenAI began to emerge. This model is a step different from anything we have seen before, especially in terms of dialogue, and there has been almost exponential progress since then.

With GPT-4, we saw a model with multimodal and improved reasoning, and everyone expected GPT-5 to follow the same path-but then a small team from OpenAI trained GPT-4o, and everything changed.

Until last year, Altman talked about the GPT-5 being in training, but in the past few months when asked about its release, he turned, hedged and talked about the “many impressive models” coming out this year.

Huet even said in his speech on Wednesday that we will see OpenAI models in multiple size in the months and years to come, not just one model suitable for ChatGPT and other products.

So what will happen next?

Based on the slides Huet shared, we will see something codenamed GPT-Next by the end of the year, and I suspect it’s actually Omni-2-a more refined, better trained, larger version of GPT-4o.

The chart suggests that this will be a significant but not groundbreaking improvement compared to what we have today-and something good will emerge in the next few years.

In a recent security update released concurrently with the International Artificial Intelligence Summit in Seoul, OpenAI said it would spend more time evaluating the functionality of any new models before release, which could explain why there is no release date.

GPT-4o is already a major transformation in the field of artificial intelligence, moving from being able to reason across text to having a native understanding of text, images and video, so any future model may be based on it and require more complex security assessments.

If you want to learn more, you can click on the link below the video.
Thank you for watching this video. If you like it, please subscribe and like it. thank

Original link:
https://www.tomsguide.com/ai/chatgpt/is-openai-scrapping-gpt-5-slide-suggests-a-move-away-from-numbers

Oil tubing:

Scroll to Top