Glossary
Frontier AGI
An artificial general intelligence system operating at the current leading edge of capability — able to reason, plan, and act across diverse domains without task-specific engineering.
Frontier AGI refers to AI systems that operate at the current boundary of what is technically possible — systems that can reason across domains, handle novel situations without specific training, and perform tasks that require genuine understanding rather than pattern matching within a narrow distribution.
The term "frontier" is significant: it emphasizes that the boundary of AGI capability is not fixed. What constitutes frontier performance in 2026 will be surpassed, and the definition of the frontier moves with the field.
How Webbeon approaches Frontier AGI
At Webbeon, frontier AGI is embodied in the Odyssey model family. Odyssey is designed from first principles for the properties we believe define genuine general intelligence:
- Long-horizon reasoning — the ability to plan and execute across extended sequences of actions, maintaining coherent goals over time
- Dual inference modes — switching between fast, intuitive responses and slow, deliberative reasoning depending on task demands
- Formal behavioral guarantees — mathematical verification of model behavior, not just empirical testing
- Cross-domain transfer — knowledge and capabilities developed in one domain that generalize meaningfully to others
Key facts
- Odyssey is trained with safety integrated into the architecture, not added as a post-hoc filter
- Formal verification covers a subset of behavioral properties that can be expressed as mathematical constraints
- Webbeon uses capability-tiered deployment: more powerful modes require stronger safety verification before release
- The term "AGI" remains contested in the research community; Webbeon uses it to describe systems with broad competence, not to imply human-equivalent general intelligence in every sense