{"type":"video","version":"1.0","html":"<iframe src=\"https://www.loom.com/embed/c062d2c380c7446e977dfccdc87c9c95\" frameborder=\"0\" width=\"1920\" height=\"1440\" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>","height":1440,"width":1920,"provider_name":"Loom","provider_url":"https://www.loom.com","thumbnail_height":1440,"thumbnail_width":1920,"thumbnail_url":"https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/c062d2c380c7446e977dfccdc87c9c95-d90affd13da68249.gif","duration":756.166667,"title":"The San Francisco Consensus Timeline","description":"This Loom outlines a “San Francisco consensus” year by year AI timeline attributed to Eric Schmidt that predicts human obsolescence. It claims that within one year most programmers will be replaced by AI programmers and AI will reach graduate level mathematics, enabled by rapid self-verification and recursive self-improvement; it cites that OpenAI and Anthropic teams already see 10 to 20 percent of development code generated by computers. The timeline projects general intelligence in 3 to 5 years and, by six years, artificial superintelligence that makes humans increasingly irrelevant because scaling becomes unstoppable while key constraints shift to power and hardware. The speaker warns society lacks language and institutions to respond, calling the transition underhyped, and ends by questioning what human worth means when intelligence is largely free."}