General
February 20, 2025
Written by Curation
Source material was radiofreemobile email
The landscape of artificial intelligence is expanding rapidly, with new models competing for dominance in an ever-crowded space. The latest iteration from xAI, Grok 3, has entered the fray, promising incremental advancements but raising questions about the long-term viability of large language models (LLMs) as the pathway to true artificial general intelligence (AGI).
Grok 3 was born out of immense computational effort—requiring 15 times the compute power of Grok 2 and leveraging an entire data center equipped with 200,000 GPUs. While this sheer scale underscores the ambition behind its development, it also highlights the diminishing returns we are witnessing in AI performance relative to increased computational investment.
On the surface, Grok 3’s performance is impressive. It outshines its predecessor and its competitors on standard benchmarks such as mathematical and coding assessments. Furthermore, it demonstrates marginal superiority in reasoning tasks over models like DeepSeek R1 and o3 when tested against metrics like AIME24 and GPQA. However, these gains are incremental rather than revolutionary, raising concerns about whether the exponential increase in computational resources is justified by the relatively modest improvements.
The pattern observed with Grok 3 is not unique. Across the AI industry, we are seeing the same trend: each new model requires significantly more compute but offers only incremental enhancements. This phenomenon explains why GPT-5 has yet to emerge and why competitors have been able to match OpenAI’s achievements in a relatively short time. The playing field is leveling, not accelerating.
At first glance, it appears we are spoiled for choice. The industry is saturated with models that demonstrate incredible abilities in controlled settings—but fail spectacularly at fundamental reasoning tasks. This reality exposes the limitations of LLMs as a pathway to AGI. The models continue to excel in pattern recognition, computation, and structured problem-solving, yet they falter in causality, logical reasoning, and fundamental conceptual understanding.
Despite their advanced capabilities, Grok 3 and its peers stumble on basic reasoning and comprehension tasks:
These failures are not unique to Grok 3. Every leading model exhibits similar shortcomings unless specifically trained to perform the task. This suggests that rather than developing genuine intelligence, these models are merely performing increasingly complex pattern recognition. They do not understand causality, which is a fundamental component of human reasoning and intelligence.
For AI to truly reason, it must move beyond statistical prediction and develop an innate understanding of relationships and concepts. The ability to recognize that if A = B, then B must also equal A should be a given—not something that requires specific training. Likewise, the capability to draw and reason about objects in the real world should not require brute-force memorization.
The AI industry has made astonishing strides, but we are no closer to achieving true reasoning than we were five years ago. Hundreds of billions of dollars have been poured into developing these models, yet they still cannot pass the simplest of reasoning tests. This suggests that LLMs alone are not the answer to AGI and that alternative approaches to AI research are needed.
While expectations for super-intelligent AI powered by LLMs are sky-high, the reality is far less promising. The overwhelming hype surrounding LLMs has led to an over-concentration of investment in this particular area of AI research, leaving other promising avenues underfunded.
A correction in AI valuations seems inevitable. However, this won’t mirror the dot-com bubble of 1999–2000 because LLMs do have significant and lucrative use cases. Nonetheless, many AI startups will likely fail or be absorbed by larger tech firms, leading to a consolidation of power among industry giants.
The companies best positioned to survive an AI correction are those that control the underlying infrastructure rather than those merely offering AI-based services.
For investors seeking exposure to AI without betting solely on LLMs, alternative strategies include:
The release of Grok 3 reinforces the view that LLMs alone will not lead to AGI. Despite massive computational resources and impressive benchmark results, the model—like its competitors—fails to grasp basic causal relationships and reasoning tasks.
The hype around generative AI is real, but so are its limitations. Investors and researchers alike must acknowledge that while LLMs have vast commercial applications, they are unlikely to be the foundation of true artificial general intelligence.
As the AI industry matures, we will likely see a shift in focus toward alternative approaches to AI, more sustainable compute strategies, and a reevaluation of business models. For now, the market is spoilt for choice, but without real breakthroughs, we may just be running in circles.
For more insights on AI, investment trends, and cutting-edge technology research, visit www.curationconnect.com.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a qualified professional for guidance related to your specific investment needs.
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