Computer Science AGI Competition

An exclusive competition where invited human programmers compete against AGI in advanced programming challenges.

About CSAC

The Computer Science AGI Competition (CSAC) is an invitation-only event organized by Data Dream. The competition brings together exceptional human programmers and advanced AGI systems to face off in solving complex programming challenges.

Participation is strictly limited to human programmers who have been formally invited by the organizing committee. Our goal is to foster innovation, demonstrate the unique capabilities of human creativity, and explore the role of AGI in advancing computer science.

Competition Rules

1. Eligibility

Only human programmers who have received formal invitations from the organizing committee are allowed to participate. AGI systems may compete as benchmarks, but human entries must be submitted individually or in teams of up to 3 members.

2. Challenges

Participants will tackle a variety of programming tasks, ranging from algorithmic puzzles to real-world problem-solving. Each challenge is designed to evaluate technical skill, problem-solving ability, and creativity.

3. Judging

Submissions will be assessed by an expert panel based on correctness, efficiency, and creativity. The AGI's performance will be reviewed in comparison with human solutions, but prizes are awarded exclusively to human participants.

4. Competition Format

The competition follows an OI-style format, but the scope of the problems is broader than traditional OI challenges. Participants will face a mix of algorithmic, system design, and creative problem-solving tasks.

5. Scoring and AGI Competition

The competition has a total score of 12,000 points. Only teams scoring above 6,000 points will qualify to compete directly against AGI systems in the final round.

Prizes

1st Place

$500,000

2nd Place

$300,000

3rd Place

$200,000

Outstanding Awards

10 Teams × $100,000

After the top 3 prizes, 10 additional teams will be recognized with Outstanding Awards, each receiving $100,000.