Google DeepMind Co-founder Hassabis Reunites with Lee Sedol a Decade After Historic AlphaGo Match
Hassabis visits Seoul, meets President Lee Jae Myung, discusses AI's potential to solve diseases and climate challenges
L'essentiel
- Demis Hassabis, co-founder of Google DeepMind, reunited Wednesday in Seoul with South Korea's legendary baduk player Lee Sedol, marking 10 years since their historic human-versus-machine match.
- Hassabis called move 37 in the 2016 AlphaGo match the most incredible moment demonstrating AI creativity, and predicted AI could help solve all diseases in 10-20 years.
- He met with President Lee Jae Myung and signed an MOU with South Korea's science ministry, also holding meetings with LG Group and Hyundai Motor Group executives.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
The 2016 AlphaGo vs Lee Sedol match was a landmark event in AI history, with AlphaGo defeating Lee 4-1. Move 37 in game 2 was widely considered an unconventional and creative move that demonstrated AI's potential for novel problem-solving beyond human intuition.
By Kang Jae-eun SEOUL, April, 29 (Yonhap) -- Demis Hassabis, the co-founder of Google DeepMind, reunited Wednesday with South Korea's legendary baduk player Lee Sedol, who went up against the company's AlphaGo AI in a legendary human-versus-machine match 10 years ago. "It's great to be back here kind of the center of where it all started" Hassabis said at the event held by Google in central Seoul, saying that the historic five-game match "signaled the beginning of these incredible advances that happened in the last decade." When asked about the Lee-AlphaGo match in 2016, the Google executive pointed to the AI's move 37 as the "most incredible moment" that demonstrated that AI can show creativity. During game two of the 2016 match, AlphaGo made an unconventional shoulder hit on the fifth line for its 37th move, widely considered a pivotal move that secured its victory against Lee. Such AI creativity can usher in a new "renaissance" of humans flourishing in science, he said, as it did in helping him solve the 50-year-old "protein folding problem," which led to a Nobel prize in 2024. "I think we could maybe even like solve all diseases in the next 10 to 20 years. We can use these technologies to help the environment and new energy sources," he said. The father of AlphaGo also mentioned South Korea's potential to become one of the leaders in the AI sector. "It's amazing at manufacturing from chips to robotics, incredible strength in industry, fantastic universities and research institutes," he said. "So I think it has all of the ingredients to be one of the world leaders in this technology." Hassabis, who has been in Seoul since Monday, has met with President Lee Jae Myung and signed a memorandum of understanding with the science ministry technology partnerships program. The executive is also said to have held separate meetings with chiefs of local conglomerates, including LG Group and Hyundai Motor Group.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Google DeepMind will announce formal AI research partnerships with Korean universities and institutes
Probable · En quelques mois
South Korea will increase AI investment to become global leader
Possible · En quelques années
Questions ouvertes
- What specific AI projects will Google DeepMind collaborate on with South Korea?
- What were the terms of the MOU signed with the science ministry?
- Will Lee Sedol play against future AI systems?







