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The “Dark Side” of Google’s New Self-Learning AI

Google’s new research proves your AI stack is a dinosaur. Unlock the "Nested Learning" advantage and the hidden unicorn opportunity in AI safety today.

Selim Yoruk's avatar
Selim Yoruk
Nov 27, 2025
∙ Paid

Do you remember the movie Memento?

The protagonist has a condition called “anterograde amnesia”. He can’t form new long-term memories. He is stuck in a permanent, frozen present, forcing him to rely on tattoos and sticky notes just to understand his own life.

Here is the uncomfortable truth: Your LLM is the guy from Memento.

Whether it’s GPT-4 or Claude, current models suffer from this exact neurological condition. They have a “long past” (their pre-training) and an “immediate present” (your context window), but they are structurally incapable of learning anything new once the training run ends.

We’ve been trying to fix this by simply building bigger brains, stacking layer upon layer in what we call “Deep Learning”. But a groundbreaking new paper from Google Research just dropped a bomb on the industry: Deep Learning is an illusion.

The researchers argue that the path to true intelligence isn’t about making models deeper; it’s about making them nested, mimicking the human brain’s ability to operate on different time frequencies.

If you are betting your startup on the current architecture, you might be betting on a dinosaur. Let’s look at what comes next.

The Problem: Your AI Has “50 First Dates” Syndrome

Current LLMs are incredible, but they are static. Once they are trained, they are frozen. They suffer from what the researchers call “anterograde amnesia”.

  • They can process the “immediate present” (your prompt/context window).

  • They recall the “long past” (their pre-training data).

  • But they cannot form new long-term memories.

They don’t learn from you. They just process you.

It’s like Adam Sandler’s 50 First Dates, every new prompt resets them back to day one, as if it’s their first time using it.

The Google team looked at the human brain for a solution. The brain doesn’t have a single clock. It has “brain waves” (Alpha, Beta, Gamma) that operate at different frequencies. Some parts of your brain update instantly (high frequency), while others consolidate information slowly over time (low frequency).

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