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    Home » Sections » AI and machine learning » GPT-5 drop imminent: AI world holds its breath

    GPT-5 drop imminent: AI world holds its breath

    OpenAI's GPT-5, the latest instalment of the AI technology that powers the ChatGPT juggernaut, is set for an imminent release.
    By Agency Staff6 August 2025
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    GPT-5 drop imminent: AI world holds its breath
    Image: Jernej Furman

    OpenAI’s GPT-5, the latest instalment of the AI technology that powered the ChatGPT juggernaut in 2022, is set for an imminent release, and users will scrutinise if the step up from GPT-4 is on par with the research lab’s previous improvements.

    Two early testers of the new model said they have been impressed with its ability to code and solve science and maths problems, but they believe the leap from GPT-4 to GPT-5 is not as large as the one from GPT-3 to GPT-4. The testers, who have signed non-disclosure agreements, declined to be named for this story. OpenAI declined to comment.

    GPT-4’s leap was based on more compute power and data, and the company was hoping that “scaling up” in a similar way would consistently lead to improved AI models.

    The hope is that GPT-5 will unlock AI applications that move beyond chat into fully autonomous task execution

    But OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft and is currently valued at US$300-billion, ran into issues scaling up. One problem was the data wall the company ran into, and OpenAI’s former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever said last year that while processing power was growing, the amount of data was not.

    He was referring to the fact that large language models are trained on massive datasets that scrape the entire internet, and AI labs have no other options for large troves of human-generated textual data.

    Apart from the lack of data, another problem was that “training runs” for large models are more likely to have hardware-induced failures given how complicated the system is, and researchers may not know the eventual performance of the models until the end of the run, which can take months.

    OpenAI has not said when GPT-5 will be released, but the industry expects it to be any day now, according to media reports. Boris Power, head of Applied Research at OpenAI, said in an X post on Monday: “Excited to see how the public receives GPT-5.”

    Enormous anticipation

    “OpenAI made such a great leap from GPT-3 to GPT-4, that ever since then there has been an enormous amount of anticipation over GPT-5,” said Navin Chaddha, managing partner at venture capital fund Mayfield, who invests in AI companies but is not an OpenAI investor. “The hope is that GPT-5 will unlock AI applications that move beyond chat into fully autonomous task execution.”

    Nearly three years ago, ChatGPT introduced the world to generative AI, dazzling users with its ability to write humanlike prose and poetry, quickly becoming one of the fastest growing apps ever.

    Read: OpenAI eyes $500-billion valuation

    In March 2023, OpenAI followed up ChatGPT with the release of GPT-4, a large language model that made huge leaps forward in intelligence. While GPT-3.5, an earlier version of the model, received a bar exam score in the bottom 10%, GPT-4 passed the simulated bar exam in the top 10%.

    GPT-4 then became the model to beat and the world came to terms with the fact that AI models could outperform humans in many tasks.

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman/Reuters
    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman/Reuters

    Soon, other companies were catching on. The same year, Google and Anthropic — which is backed by Amazon and Google — released competitive models to GPT-4. Within a year, open-source models on par with GPT-4 such as Meta Platforms’ Llama 3 models were released.

    Along with training large models, OpenAI has now invested in another route, called “test-time compute”, which channels more processing power to solve challenging tasks such as maths or complex operations that demand human-like reasoning and decision-making.

    The company’s CEO Sam Altman said earlier this year that GPT-5 would combine both test-time compute and its large models. He also said that OpenAI’s model and product offerings had become “complicated”.  — Anna Tong, (c) 2025 Reuters

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