Tools
Change country:

OpenAI as we knew it is dead

A blurred double-exposure photo of two versions of Sam Altman’s head.
Sam Altman.

OpenAI, the company that brought you ChatGPT, just sold you out.

Since its founding in 2015, its leaders have said their top priority is making sure artificial intelligence is developed safely and beneficially. They’ve touted the company’s unusual corporate structure as a way of proving the purity of its motives. OpenAI was a nonprofit controlled not by its CEO or by its shareholders, but by a board with a single mission: keep humanity safe.

But this week, the news broke that OpenAI will no longer be controlled by the nonprofit board. OpenAI is turning into a full-fledged for-profit benefit corporation. Oh, and CEO Sam Altman, who had previously emphasized that he didn’t have any equity in the company, will now get equity worth billions, in addition to ultimate control over OpenAI.

In an announcement that hardly seems coincidental, chief technology officer Mira Murati said shortly before that news broke that she was leaving the company. Employees were so blindsided that many of them reportedly reacted to her abrupt departure with a “WTF” emoji in Slack.

WTF indeed.

The whole point of OpenAI was to be nonprofit and safety-first. It began sliding away from that vision years ago when, in 2019, OpenAI created a for-profit arm so it could rake in the kind of huge investments it needed from Microsoft as the costs of building advanced AI scaled up. But some of its employees and outside admirers still held out hope that the company would stick to its principles. That hope can now be put to bed.

“We can say goodbye to the original version of OpenAI that wanted to be unconstrained by financial obligations,” Jeffrey Wu, who joined the company in 2018 and worked on early models like GPT-2 and GPT-3, told me.

“Restructuring around a core for-profit entity formalizes what outsiders have known for some time: that OpenAI is seeking to profit in an industry that has received an enormous influx of investment in the last few years,” said Sarah Kreps, director of Cornell’s Tech Policy Institute. The shift departs from OpenAI’s “founding emphasis on safety, transparency and an aim of not concentrating power.”

And if this week’s news is the final death knell for OpenAI’s lofty founding vision, it’s clear who killed it.  

How Sam Altman became an existential risk to OpenAI’s mission

When OpenAI was cofounded in 2015 by Elon Musk (along with Altman and others), who was worried that AI could pose an existential risk to humanity, the budding research lab introduced itself to the world with these three sentences:

OpenAI is a nonprofit artificial intelligence research company. Our goal is to advance digital intelligence in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return. Since our research is free from financial obligations, we can better focus on a positive human impact.

All of that is objectively false now.

Since Altman took the helm of OpenAI in 2019, the company has been drifting from its mission. That year, the company — meaning the original nonprofit — created a for-profit subsidiary so it could pull in the huge investments needed to build cutting-edge AI. But it did something unprecedented in Silicon Valley: It capped how much profit investors could make. They could get up to 100 times what they put in, but beyond that, the money would go to the nonprofit, which would use it to benefit the public. For example, it could fund a universal basic income program to help people adjust to automation-induced joblessness.  

Over the next few years, OpenAI increasingly deprioritized its focus on safety as it rushed to commercialize products. By 2023, the nonprofit board had grown so suspicious of Altman that it tried to oust him. But he quickly clawed his way back to power, exploiting his relationship with Microsoft, with a new board stacked in his favor. And earlier this year, OpenAI’s safety team imploded as staffers lost faith in Altman and quit the company. 

Now, Altman has taken the final step in consolidating his power: He’s stripped the board of its control entirely. Although it will still exist, it won’t have any teeth. 

“It seems to me the original nonprofit has been disempowered and had its mission reinterpreted to be fully aligned with profit,” Wu said.

Profit may be what Altman feels the company desperately needs. Despite a supremely confident blog post published this week, in which he claimed that AI would help with “fixing the climate, establishing a space colony, and the discovery of all of physics,” OpenAI is actually in a jam. It’s been struggling to find a clear route to financial success for its models, which cost hundreds of millions — if not billions — to build. Restructuring the business into a for-profit could help attract investors.

But the move has some observers ­— including Musk himself — asking: How could this possibly be legal?

If OpenAI does away with the profit cap, it would be redirecting a huge amount of money — prospective billions of dollars in the future — from the nonprofit to investors. Because the nonprofit is there to represent the public, this would effectively mean shifting billions away from people like you and me. As some are noting, it feels a lot like theft.  

“If OpenAI were to retroactively remove profit caps from investments, this would in effect transfer billions in value from a non-profit to for-profit investors,” Jacob Hilton, a former employee of OpenAI who joined before it transitioned from a nonprofit to a capped-profit structure. “Unless the non-profit were appropriately compensated, this would be a money grab. In my view, such a thing would be incompatible with OpenAI’s charter, which states that OpenAI’s primary fiduciary duty is to humanity, and I do not understand how the law could permit it.”

But because OpenAI’s structure is so unprecedented, the legality of such a shift might seem confusing to some. And that may be exactly what the company is counting on.

Asked to comment on this, OpenAI said only to refer to its statement in Bloomberg. There, a company spokesperson said OpenAI remains “focused on building AI that benefits everyone,” adding that “the nonprofit is core to our mission and will continue to exist.”

The take-home message is clear: Regulate, regulate, regulate

Advocates for AI safety have been arguing that we need to pass regulation that would provide some oversight of big AI companies — like California’s SB 1047 bill, which Gov. Gavin Newsom must either sign into law or veto in the next few days.

Now, Altman has neatly made their case for them.

“The general public and regulators should be aware that by default, AI companies will be incentivized to disregard some of the costs and risks of AI deployment — and there’s a chance those risks will be enormous,” Wu said.  

Altman is also validating the concerns of his ex-employees who published a proposal demanding that employees at major AI companies be allowed a “right to warn” about advanced AI. Per the proposal: “AI companies have strong financial incentives to avoid effective oversight, and we do not believe bespoke structures of corporate governance are sufficient to change this.” 

Obviously, they were right: OpenAI’s nonprofit was meant to reign over the for-profit arm, but Altman just flipped that structure upside down.  

After years of sweet-talking the press, the public, and the policymakers in Congress, assuring all that OpenAI wants regulation and cares more about safety than about money, Altman is not even bothering to play games anymore. He’s showing everyone his true colors.

Governor Newsom, are you seeing this?

Congress, are you seeing this?

World, are you seeing this?


Read full article on: vox.com
NY detective charged with hate crime after exploding on black cellular service worker, using racial slur
"The victim here was just trying to do his job, when the defendant allegedly harassed him and damaged his vehicle."
5 m
nypost.com
Dems’ attacks on the intelligent, articulate, and patriotic Pete Hegseth show why they lost – a salute to Trump’s defense secretary pick
The elitist attacks on Donald Trump’s defense secretary pick Pete Hegseth show exactly why Democrats lost the election in a landslide.
8 m
nypost.com
Pete Hegseth Would Get 'Outmaneuvered' by Pentagon Leaders: Ex-Trump Aide
"This is not a qualified person for this role," Alyssa Farah Griffin said of Hegseth on CNN.
newsweek.com
ESPN NBA writer rips Lakers' 'special treatment' of Bronny James: 'Gone too far'
ESPN NBA writer Brian Windhorst criticized the Los Angeles Lakers' plan for Bronny James, who won't be heading on the road with the G League South Bay Lakers.
foxnews.com
Erik Spoelstra’s game-blowing flub exposed this hard coaching truth
Every time you look at the replay, you expect the video to somehow correct itself. That’s how crazy it was. That’s how inexplicable it was, and is.
nypost.com
What Time Will ‘The Golden Bachelorette’ Finale Be On Hulu?
Grab the tissues and brace for an "original ending," Bachelor Nation.
nypost.com
Jean-Pierre confirms Biden 'still stands' by claims that Trump is a 'threat to democracy'
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre bristled when FOX Business correspondent Edward Lawrence asked her if President Biden apologized to President-elect Trump.
foxnews.com
Protests Erupt in Paris Over Pro-Israel Gala Organized by Far-Right Figures
The demonstrations came on the eve of a high-stakes soccer match at France’s national stadium against the Israeli national team, overshadowed by tensions around the wars in the Middle East.
time.com
1 dead, Supreme Court evacuated as explosions rattle Brazilian capital
The Brazilian Supreme Court was evacuated Wednesday following two explosions in its vicinity, stoking security concerns in the G20's leadup.
foxnews.com
Holiday travel in 2024 could be ‘the most on-time’ ever, experts predict
The good news comes just two years after a post-pandemic rush caused nightmare scenarios at some airports.
nypost.com
FBI offering $25K reward for info leading to suspect wanted for ballot box fires in Oregon, Washington state
The FBI announced its offering a reward of up to $25,000 for information leading to the arrest of the suspect responsible for West Coast ballot box fires.
foxnews.com
Expert suggests 50-year-olds refresh driving lessons
A controversial report has suggested Australians aged over 50 could be subjected to mandatory driving lessons.
nypost.com
Channing Tatum ditches his shirt for thirst trap after Zoë Kravitz split: ‘It’s a vibe’
News broke in October that the "21 Jump Street" star and the actress called off their engagement, though sources told Page Six they still keep in touch.
nypost.com
Flag football playoffs: Verdugo Hills hands Birmingham its first program defeat
Julianna Sarabia intercepts a pass and runs for a touchdown in 12-0 City Open Division flag football playoff win for Verdugo Hills over Birmingham.
latimes.com
No. 22 St. John’s staves off Wagner scare as Kadary Richmond sparks game-sealing run
Somehow, Wagner had the chance to get even deep into the second half.
nypost.com
‘The Golden Bachelorette’ Finale Recap: Did Joan Vassos Get Engaged To Chock Chapple Or Guy Gansert?
The recap you've been waiting for has finally arrived.
nypost.com
John Cena Confirms First PLE Match of WWE Retirement Tour
WWE Superstar and 16-time World Champion John Cena has just confirmed his first PLE match as he goes on his retirement tour for 2025.
newsweek.com
‘The Golden Bachelorette’s Guy Gansert Reacts To “Heartbreaking” Breakup: “I Thought I Was The Guy. I Was Convinced”
Grab the tissues, Guy stans.
nypost.com
Aaron Rodgers is all that stands between the Jets and total oblivion
Herein lies one of the most daunting challenges of Rodgers’ professional life: Keeping this Jets team from spiraling further into oblivion.
nypost.com
What Mike Huckabee, Trump’s Pick for Israel Ambassador, Has Said About the Middle East
He has called for a “one-state solution” and doesn’t accept the term “Palestinians.”
time.com
What to Know About Former Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trump’s Pick for Attorney General
After his selection by Trump, Gaetz resigned from Congress, ending an ongoing ethics probe into allegations against him of child sex trafficking.
time.com
Lichtman Blames Bad Election Prediction on Conservative Media 'Disinformation' and Elon Musk
Historian and political scientist Allan Lichtman said Tuesday on NewsNation's "Cuomo" that conservative media disinformation and billionaire Elon Musk were why his election prediction that Vice President Harris would win the presidency was incorrect. The post Lichtman Blames Bad Election Prediction on Conservative Media ‘Disinformation’ and Elon Musk appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Karen Read prosecutors seek to ‘substantially’ reduce witnesses called to speed up upcoming re-trial
Read's first trial ended with a gridlocked jury and mistrial in July, with the new trial currently slated for January.
1 h
nypost.com
Long Island firefighter arrested, accused of intentionally setting brush fire: police
A volunteer firefighter on Long Island was arrested Tuesday after allegedly starting a brush fire intentionally that damaged a car during dry conditions.
1 h
foxnews.com
LAURA INGRAHAM: Those with the perfect DC resumes have repeatedly failed to keep us safe
Fox News host Laura Ingraham reacts to President-elect Trump’s plans to fix Washington, D.C., as he begins to announce his political picks on “The Ingraham Angle."
1 h
foxnews.com
Residents of storm-ravaged town where FEMA skipped Trump supporters’ houses confirm they never heard from disaster agency — until now
"I heard nothing from FEMA before this week," said Stu Randal, who had a Trump sign displayed in his yard.
1 h
nypost.com
JESSE WATTERS: The government works for us, not the other way around
Fox News host Jesse Watters broke down what Washington can expect as President-elect Trump gets his new administration staffed on “Jesse Watters Primetime.”
1 h
foxnews.com
Giants aren’t giving up on mercurial Deonte Banks yet: ‘Bright future’
Has Deonte Banks’ discouraging second season changed how the Giants view him?
1 h
nypost.com
Boy, 14, charged with intentionally setting 52-acre NJ forest fire
Cops are now investigating if the teen may have played a role in starting an even larger fire in the same area.
1 h
nypost.com
New York state’s population could drop by 2 million people come 2050, shocking study finds
New York state’s population could plummet by more than 2 million people by 2050 – a drop of more than 13%, a shocking new study claims.
1 h
nypost.com
Opioid overdoses deaths drop for 12th straight month
Overdose deaths have slowed 18% since a peak last year, the CDC estimates.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Woman charged after leaving her child on roadway, falsely reporting kidnapping: police
A Louisiana woman is behind bars after police say she falsely reported the kidnapping of her young son last week.
1 h
nypost.com
Justice Department officials react to Trump picking Matt Gaetz for attorney general
President-elect Donald Trump's pick of Rep. Matt Gaetz as his future attorney general has sent shockwaves through the Justice Department.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
11/13: The Daily Report
Lindsey Reiser reports on the reaction to President-Elect Trump's latest leadership picks for his upcoming administration, what new data tells us about the state of the U.S. economy, and the potential impact of Trump's proposed energy policies.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Pennsylvania Senate Race Moves to Recount as Republican Dave McCormick Holds Lead over Bob Casey
Pennsylvania's Senate race moved to a recount as Senator-elect Dave McCormick (R) continues to hold a lead over incumbent Sen. Bob Casey (D). The post Pennsylvania Senate Race Moves to Recount as Republican Dave McCormick Holds Lead over Bob Casey appeared first on Breitbart.
1 h
breitbart.com
What does another Trump term mean for American energy
President-elect Donald Trump vowed to cut U.S. energy prices by 50% within one year of taking office. He is also expected to loosen regulations on oil and natural gas companies. Patrick De Haan, the head of petroleum analysis for GasBuddy.com, a website that tracks fuel prices, joins CBS News to discuss.
1 h
cbsnews.com
Seattle finally starts throwing shoplifters and other petty criminals in jail for the first time in 4 years
The change reverses pandemic-era restrictions by King County that kept Seattle police from booking all but the most serious misdemeanors into the slammer.
1 h
nypost.com
How to Watch Grizzlies vs Lakers, Live Stream NBA Basketball, TV Channel
Catch the late-night NBA game between the Grizzlies and Lakers on Wednesday night.
1 h
newsweek.com
Bear attack on car prompted hefty insurance claim. Video shows it was just somebody in a costume
Four Los Angeles residents are accused of creating videos of a fake bear ravaging pricey automobiles to cash in on the insurance money.
1 h
latimes.com
Heir to $292M pie fortune made chilling online search before alleged ‘frenzied’ stabbing of roommate: court
Dylan Thomas, 24, searched “anatomy of the neck” just before allegedly ambushing his unsuspecting roommate and friend, William Bush, 23, who was planning on moving in with a girlfriend.
2 h
nypost.com
American tourist, 60, found 'beaten to death' at 5-star hotel in Ireland frequented by celebrities
A 60-year-old American man was found "beaten to death" at Ballyfin Demesne, a luxurious five-star hotel in Ireland. Police said a suspect is in custody.
2 h
foxnews.com
Analyzing the defense secretary role as Trump taps Hegseth
President-elect Donald Trump picked Fox News host Pete Hegseth for the Secretary of Defense position. CBS News national security contributor Sam Vinograd discusses what is expected of the role and if Hegseth is up for the challenge.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Democratic Congressman on the party's messaging, focus
Democratic leaders are divided over what to blame for their 2024 election losses. Democratic Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachusetts joins "The Daily Report" to discuss the party's messaging and focus.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Knicks getting first-hand look at Karl-Anthony Towns’ passing prowess
“He just sees the game,” said Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau, who also coached Karl-Anthony Towns earlier in his career in Minnesota.
2 h
nypost.com
MAGA loyalist Matt Gaetz is Trump's pick for attorney general. Will he be confirmed?
President-elect Donald Trump's pick of Matt Gaetz for attorney general sent a clear signal that he wants the Justice Department to take a sharp-elbowed, hyper-partisan approach to law and order.
2 h
latimes.com
Torrance courthouse closed after bomb squad responds to suspicious bag and cryptic note
A bag seemingly abandoned on a bench prompted the shutdown of the Torrance courthouse early Wednesday and drew the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s bomb squad to the scene.
2 h
latimes.com
House GOP reaches deal to make it harder to oust speaker
The agreement would increase the threshold that allowed a single member to trigger a no-confidence vote to remove the speaker.
2 h
cbsnews.com
Update on Idaho's near-total abortion ban trial
The trial over Idaho's near-total abortion ban continued in Boise on Wednesday. The four women involved in the case are asking a judge to clarify and expand exceptions to women who need medical abortions in order to save their lives. CBS News correspondent Nicole Valdes has the latest.
2 h
cbsnews.com