'Extraordinary... beautifully written, clear-eyed and
engaged in the deepest ethical questions of our day' Rory Stewart
A revelatory portrait of the visionary behind Google DeepMind, the race to
control the future – and what it means to win
Even in a tech world crowded with visionary leaders, Demis Hassabis is
recognized as a special case. Born to working class, immigrant parents in North
London, a chess prodigy by five and wizard coder in his teens, he turned down a
seven-figure job offer from a video-game studio to study science at Cambridge.
Long before the current obsession with AI, he founded the path-breaking company
DeepMind in order to pursue a single, audacious goal: the dream of artificial
superintelligence, which would solve humanity’s hardest problems, change life
and work as we know it, and perhaps even unlock the deepest mysteries of the
Universe. For his scientific achievements, he won a Nobel Prize in 2024, and
his company, now Google DeepMind, is considered the tech giant’s engine room.
For the past three years, Sebastian Mallaby has had unprecedented access to
Hassabis and DeepMind, conducting hundreds of hours of interviews with him and
his inner circle as well as detractors and rivals at other companies. The
result is a revelation-packed portrait of a singular mind and a historic
reckoning with the AI revolution, a shift potentially more significant than any
since the dawn of complex thought 70,000 years ago.
As Mallaby chronicles, DeepMind is locked in an arms race with Silicon Valley
competitors to build artificial general intelligence, and thereby become the
keeper of humanity’s future. Yet this is not a Silicon Valley story. Hassabis
has remained in Britain, and unlike his rivals, his aims are not wealth and
power but scientific enlightenment. Like them, however, he is haunted by the
memory of Robert Oppenheimer, the creator of the atom bomb. He aims to control
the technology, but the technology may ultimately control him – and humanity
writ large.
About the Author
Sebastian Mallaby is the author of several books
including the The Power Law, More Money Than God and The
Man Who Knew, which won the Financial Times & McKinsey
Business Book of the Year Award. A former Financial
Times contributing editor and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist,
Mallaby is the Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics at the
Council on Foreign Relations.