
FaceTime Like a Pro
Get our exclusive Ultimate FaceTime Guide 📚 — absolutely FREE when you sign up for our newsletter below.
FaceTime Like a Pro
Get our exclusive Ultimate FaceTime Guide 📚 — absolutely FREE when you sign up for our newsletter below.
GitHub accidentally leaked OpenAI’s GPT-5 hours before the official launch, revealing four new models with advanced capabilities. Here’s what was exposed before the post was deleted.
OpenAI has been teasing something big all week, and it looks like the surprise didn’t quite go as planned. Just hours before its official event, GitHub accidentally published a blog post revealing details about GPT-5, OpenAI’s next major AI model. The post was quickly deleted, but not before Reddit users spotted it, saved it, and started talking. One user even shared an archived version, making sure the leak lived on even after it was taken down.
The deleted GitHub blog confirmed what many had been speculating: GPT-5 is coming, and it’s not just one model. It’s a whole lineup of four, each tailored for a different use case. The post also called GPT-5 OpenAI’s “most advanced model” yet, promising major leaps in reasoning, code generation, and how the model interacts with users.
Before it vanished, the blog post listed four variants of GPT-5:
The post said GPT-5 could “handle complex coding tasks with minimal prompting” and described its “enhanced agentic capabilities,” hinting that it may be smarter at taking initiative during tasks.
The leak dropped just before OpenAI’s big reveal, which is scheduled for today at 10AM PT. And yes, the event teaser says “LIVE5TREAM”, with a big bold 5 right in the middle. Over the weekend, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman hinted that “something big” was coming. Now, we know what he meant.
Even before the GitHub post slipped out, some users had already spotted signs in OpenAI’s API docs. Icons for “gpt-5-mini” and “gpt-5-nano” quietly showed up, pointing to an upcoming launch. This leak has just made it official.
That said, we still don’t have all the answers. It’s unclear when these models will be available to everyone, or if free users will get access right away. And while GitHub briefly compared GPT-5 to Claude, Llama 4, and Cohere v2, we’ll have to wait and see how it actually stacks up.
One thing is certain: GPT-5 is real, and it’s arriving today. GitHub may have spoiled the surprise, but the countdown is still on. We’ll be watching the livestream and sharing all the updates as they roll in.
Don’t miss these related reads: