Databricks co-founder wins prestigious ACM award, says ‘AGI is here already’
Databricks co-founder and CTO Matei Zaharia almost missed the email telling him that he was the 2026 recipient of the ACM Prize in Computing. “Yeah, it was a surprise,” he told TechCrunch.
Big data was in those days what AI is today and Spark turned the tech industry on its ear.
The 28-year-old Zaharia became a tech celeb.
Along the way the company has raised over $20 billion — valuing it at $134 billion — and hit $5.
4 billion in revenue run rate. The Silicon Valley dream. On Wednesday, the Association for Computing Machinery issued him the award for his collective contributions.
Like
everyone else in the Valley, the future he sees is filled with AI.
It’s just not in a form that we appreciate,” he told TechCrunch.
” A person, for instance, can only pass the bar exam to be a lawyer if they’ve integrated vast amounts of knowledge.
But an AI can ingest vast amounts of facts easily.
If it answers knowledge questions correctly, that doesn’t equate to general knowledge. This tendency to treat AI like a human can have some profoundly negative impacts. He offers the example of the popular AI agent OpenClaw. “On the one hand, it’s awesome. You can do so many things with it. It just does them automatically,” he said. But it’s also “a security nightmare” because it’s designed to mimic a human assistant that you trust with things like passwords.
“Yeah, it’s not a little human there,” he says.
Just like how vibe coding made prototyping and programming accessible to anyone, he thinks that accurate, no-hallucinations AI-powered research will someday become universal.
Eventually we’ll make AI work better for us by having it lean into its strengths: telling us what every rattle in our car means, or scanning beyond text and images to include radio and microwaves, or, what he’s seeing students do now, simulate molecular-level changes and predict their effectiveness.
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