Google’s AI Cancer Research Breakthrough and AGI Declaration
Key Takeaways:
- Google’s new 27B-parameter AI model identifies novel cancer therapy pathway
- Google VP Blaise Agüera y Arcas declares “We already have AGI”
- Breakthrough could make ‘cold’ tumors ‘hot’ for better immunotherapy response
Google has achieved a significant breakthrough in cancer research using artificial intelligence, while one of its top executives has made the startling claim that artificial general intelligence already exists.
Google’s Cancer Research Milestone
In collaboration with Yale University, Google developed Cell2Sentence-Scale 27B (C2S-Scale), a 27 billion parameter foundation model designed to decode the language of individual cells. The AI model successfully identified a novel interferon-conditional amplifier that could revolutionize cancer treatment.
“C2S-Scale successfully identified a novel interferon-conditional amplifier, revealing a new pathway to make ‘cold’ tumors ‘hot,’ potentially improving their response to immunotherapy,” the researchers wrote, while cautiously calling it “an early first step.”
This breakthrough represents Google’s research-focused approach to AI development, contrasting with competitors who focus more on public announcements and future visions.
AGI Declaration from Google Executive
In an exclusive conversation, Blaise Agüera y Arcas, Vice President, Fellow, and Chief Technology Officer of Technology & Society at Google, made a seismic statement: “We already have AGI.”
The declaration challenges the AI industry’s ongoing debate about when artificial general intelligence might arrive and represents a significant departure from conventional thinking.
AI and Creativity: Historical Parallels
Blaise Agüera y Arcas: “I think that defensive reactions, that it erases the need for artists or devalues human creativity, are reductive and pose a false dichotomy. In sort of the same way that when photography was invented in the 19th century, there was an uproar in certain quarters that it supposedly devalued painting.”
Agüera y Arcas compared current concerns about AI and creativity to the historical reaction to photography’s invention, noting that rather than diminishing art, photography ushered in a golden age of artistic expression.
Can AI Truly Understand Emotions?
Blaise Agüera y Arcas: “When an LLM reads a short story and you ask it, ‘how does this character feel at this point?’, it answers convincingly. We’ve run a bunch of experiments with LLMs to test for theory of mind, which includes factual and also emotion or how somebody will behave or react in a certain way.”
While AI can emulate emotional understanding through training on human dialogue, the question of whether it actually experiences feelings remains unanswered due to fundamental differences in how AI systems process information compared to human biology.



