A Ex-Google AI Pioneer Says Getting a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence Is No Longer Worth It. Here's Why. Jad Tarifi, who founded Google's first generative AI team and has a Ph.D. from the University of Florida, wouldn't recommend starting a program now.

By Sherin Shibu Edited by Melissa Malamut

Key Takeaways

  • Jad Tarifi, an early AI pioneer who founded Google's first generative AI team, wouldn’t recommend getting a Ph.D. in artificial intelligence anymore.
  • Tarifi earned a doctorate in AI at the University of Florida in 2012.
  • He says in the five to seven years it takes to graduate with a Ph.D., AI's problems will already be solved.

AI researchers are in high demand, with some offered billion-dollar compensation packages from Meta amid the ongoing AI talent wars.

However, one AI pioneer, Jad Tarifi, who founded Google's first generative AI team after obtaining a Ph.D. in AI, would not recommend higher study to break into the field.

In a new interview with Business Insider, Tarifi, 42, predicted that within the five to seven years it takes to obtain a Ph.D., most of AI's problems will be solved.

"Even things like applying AI to robotics will be solved by then," Tarifi told BI.

Related: AI Is Going to 'Replace Everybody' in Several Fields, According to the 'Godfather of AI.' Here's Who He Says Should Be 'Terrified.'

Tarifi explained that obtaining a Ph.D. was only for "weird people" who were "obsessed" with a certain field because higher education required "a lot of pain" and at least five years of their lives.

He recommended staying away from the Ph.D. route altogether or choosing to specialize in a subfield of AI that is still in its early stages, like AI for biology.

Tarifi received a Ph.D. in 2012 from the University of Florida, where he worked on an AI theory that combined principles from neuroscience, geometry, and machine learning, according to his LinkedIn. He then joined Google, where he became a tech lead and manager for nearly a decade, working on models for Google's generative AI projects.

Tarifi is now the founder and CEO of Integral AI, a startup that focuses on creating AI agents to act autonomously on behalf of users.

Related: These 3 Professions Are Most Likely to Vanish in the Next 20 Years Due to AI, According to a New Report

In the BI interview, Tarifi also warned prospective students from completing degrees in law and medicine, arguing that the information in these programs was "outdated" and memorization-based.

Tarifi isn't the first person to warn students away from higher degrees. Venture capitalist Victor Lazarte said earlier this year that AI is "fully replacing people" in the legal profession. He predicted that AI would take over entry-level legal positions usually filled by recent law school graduates within the next three years.

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Sherin Shibu

Entrepreneur Staff

News Reporter

Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Entrepreneur.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business Insider, The Messenger, and ZDNET as a reporter and copyeditor. Her areas of coverage encompass tech, business, strategy, finance, and even space. She is a Columbia University graduate.

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