HomeTechnologyAI wins 'gold medal' at the Math Olympiad: Here’s why Google and OpenAI are  making noise about it

AI wins 'gold medal' at the Math Olympiad: Here’s why Google and OpenAI are  making noise about it

Both companies used general-purpose AI models — presumably more advanced than what’s publicly available — and ran them under IMO conditions, i.e. no internet access, no external tools, and a strict time limit.

July 22, 2025 / 15:24 IST
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Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence models from DeepMind and OpenAI are flexing their mathematical muscles—but not without raising a few eyebrows. Both companies recently claimed gold-level performances at the prestigious International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), a notoriously difficult competition for high school students. Yet only one of them actually showed up.

The IMO challenges young mathematical prodigies with six gruelling problems across two 4.5-hour sessions. This year, 630 students competed, and just 67 managed to clinch gold by scoring above 34 out of 42 points.

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DeepMind’s model joined the fray, followed the rules, and scored 35—enough for a legitimate gold. OpenAI, on the other hand, didn’t formally participate, according to a report by Gizmodo. Instead, it took the public test papers, ran them internally, and declared its model had also scored a 35. It then publicised the result before the official results were posted, reportedly against the IMO organisers’ explicit request not to overshadow the students.

Both companies used general-purpose AI models — presumably more advanced than what’s publicly available — and ran them under IMO conditions, i.e. no internet access, no external tools, and a strict time limit. That makes their performance notable in terms of reasoning ability, especially since earlier attempts with large models struggled on Olympiad problems.