diff --git "a/5dcc74aa-8076-4a5a-85f0-5e1c254347c0.json" "b/5dcc74aa-8076-4a5a-85f0-5e1c254347c0.json" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/5dcc74aa-8076-4a5a-85f0-5e1c254347c0.json" @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ +{ + "interaction_id": "5dcc74aa-8076-4a5a-85f0-5e1c254347c0", + "search_results": [ + { + "page_name": "OpenAI announces leadership transition", + "page_url": "https://openai.com/blog/openai-announces-leadership-transition", + "page_snippet": "The board of directors of OpenAI, Inc., the 501(c)(3) that acts as the overall governing body for all OpenAI activities, today announced that Sam Altman will depart as CEO and leave the board of directors. Mira Murati, the company\u2019s chief technology officer, will serve as interim CEO, effective ...The board of directors of OpenAI, Inc., the 501(c)(3) that acts as the overall governing body for all OpenAI activities, today announced that Sam Altman will depart as CEO and leave the board of directors. Mira Murati, the company\u2019s chief technology officer, will serve as interim CEO, effective immediately. A member of OpenAI\u2019s leadership team for five years, Mira has played a critical role in OpenAI\u2019s evolution into a global AI leader. She brings a unique skill set, understanding of the company\u2019s values, operations, and business, and already leads the company\u2019s research, product, and safety functions. Given her long tenure and close engagement with all aspects of the company, including her experience in AI governance and policy, the board believes she is uniquely qualified for the role and anticipates a seamless transition while it conducts a formal search for a permanent CEO. Mr. Altman\u2019s departure follows a deliberative review process by the board, which concluded that he was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities. The board no longer has confidence in his ability to continue leading OpenAI. In a statement, the board of directors said: \u201cOpenAI was deliberately structured to advance our mission: to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all humanity. The board remains fully committed to serving this mission. We are grateful for Sam\u2019s many contributions to the founding and growth of OpenAI.", + "page_result": "\n\n\nOpenAI announces leadership transition\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
Blog

OpenAI announces leadership transition

November 17, 2023

Authors

Chief technology officer Mira Murati appointed interim CEO to lead OpenAI; Sam Altman departs the company.

Search process underway to identify permanent successor.


The board of directors of OpenAI, Inc., the 501(c)(3) that acts as the overall governing body for all OpenAI activities, today announced that Sam Altman will depart as CEO and leave the board of directors. Mira Murati, the company\u2019s chief technology officer, will serve as interim CEO, effective immediately.

A member of OpenAI\u2019s leadership team for five years, Mira has played a critical role in OpenAI\u2019s evolution into a global AI leader. She brings a unique skill set, understanding of the company\u2019s values, operations, and business, and already leads the company\u2019s research, product, and safety functions.\u00a0Given her long tenure and close engagement with all aspects of the company, including her experience in AI governance and policy, the board believes she is uniquely qualified for the role and anticipates a seamless transition while it conducts a formal search for a permanent CEO.

Mr. Altman\u2019s departure follows a deliberative review process by the board, which concluded that he was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities. The board no longer has confidence in his ability to continue leading OpenAI.

In a statement, the board of directors said: \u201cOpenAI was deliberately structured to advance our mission: to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all humanity. The board remains fully committed to serving this mission. We are grateful for Sam\u2019s many contributions to the founding and growth of OpenAI. At the same time, we believe new leadership is necessary as we move forward. As the leader of the company\u2019s research, product, and safety functions, Mira is exceptionally qualified to step into the role of interim CEO. We have the utmost confidence in her ability to lead OpenAI during this transition period.\u201d

OpenAI\u2019s board of directors consists of OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, independent directors Quora CEO Adam D\u2019Angelo, technology entrepreneur Tasha McCauley, and Georgetown Center for Security and Emerging Technology\u2019s Helen Toner.

As a part of this transition,\u00a0Greg Brockman will be stepping down as chairman of the board and will remain in his role at the company, reporting to the CEO.

OpenAI was founded as a non-profit in 2015 with the core mission of ensuring that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity. In 2019, OpenAI restructured to ensure that the company could raise capital in pursuit of this mission, while preserving the nonprofit's mission, governance, and oversight. The majority of the board is independent, and the independent directors do not hold equity in OpenAI. While the company has experienced dramatic growth, it remains the fundamental governance responsibility of the board to advance OpenAI\u2019s mission and preserve the principles of its Charter.

Authors

\n", + "page_last_modified": " Sat, 09 Mar 2024 03:17:11 GMT" + }, + { + "page_name": "Sam Altman's back. Here's who's on the new OpenAI board and who's out", + "page_url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/22/sam-altmans-back-heres-whos-on-the-new-openai-board-and-whos-out.html", + "page_snippet": "After several days of crisis and tumult, Sam Altman has returned as the CEO of OpenAI. Three new board members have replaced the previous leadership that ousted Altman. OpenAI's new board doesn't appear to be fully built. Negotiations are reportedly underway to install representation from Microsoft ...Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in an interview with CNBC on Monday that governance at OpenAI needed to change. Nadella said Wednesday he is \"encouraged\" by the changes to the company's board, according to a post on X, formerly known as Twitter. The executive launched his own artificial intelligence venture alongside a former Google executive in February. It isn't clear whether Taylor's involvement with his own AI startup will cease with his appointment to lead OpenAI's board. After several days of crisis and tumult, Sam Altman has returned as the CEO of OpenAI. Three new board members have replaced the previous leadership that ousted Altman. OpenAI's new board doesn't appear to be fully built. Negotiations are reportedly underway to install representation from Microsoft or other major investors. OpenAI's new board doesn't appear to be fully built. Negotiations are reportedly underway to install representation from Microsoft or other major investors. Here's who's in, who's out, and what the changes may mean. ... Sam Altman (L), US entrepreneur, investor, programmer, and founder and CEO of artificial intelligence company OpenAI, and the company's co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, speak together at Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv on June 5, 2023.", + "page_result": "Sam Altman's back. Here's who's on the new OpenAI board and who's out

Tech

Sam Altman's back. Here's who's on the new OpenAI board and who's out

Key Points
  • After several days of crisis and tumult, Sam Altman has returned as the CEO of OpenAI. Three new board members have replaced the previous leadership that ousted Altman.
  • OpenAI's new board doesn't appear to be fully built. Negotiations are reportedly underway to install representation from Microsoft or other major investors.
  • Here's who's in, who's out, and what the changes may mean.

In this article

Sam Altman (L), US entrepreneur, investor, programmer, and founder and CEO of artificial intelligence company OpenAI, and the company's co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, speak together at Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv on June 5, 2023.
Jack Guez | Afp | Getty Images

After several days of crisis and tumult, Sam Altman has returned as the CEO of OpenAI. Three new board members have replaced the previous leadership that ousted Altman.

OpenAI's new board doesn't appear to be fully built. Negotiations are reportedly underway to install representation from Microsoft, which has invested billions of dollars in OpenAI, or other major investors.

There's a notable change in the board's experience. The previous board included academics and researchers, but OpenAI's new directors have extensive backgrounds in business and technology.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in an interview with CNBC on Monday that governance at OpenAI needed to change. Nadella said Wednesday he is "encouraged" by the changes to the company's board, according to a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

"We believe this is a first essential step on a path to more stable, well-informed, and effective governance," he said.

Microsoft, Sequoia Capital, Thrive Capital and Tiger Global are among the OpenAI investors that lack representation on the board but had been pushing to reinstate Altman, as CNBC previously reported.

Here's who's in, who's out, and what the changes may mean.

Here are the newest members of OpenAI's board

Bret Taylor, co-CEO of Salesforce, speaks at the Viva Technology Conference in Paris on June 15, 2022.
Nathan Laine | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Bret Taylor, board chair

Bret Taylor is currently a board member at the e-commerce platform Shopify. He's also the former co-CEO of Salesforce and was Twitter's final board chair prior to Elon Musk's acquisition of the social media platform.

Taylor co-founded Quip, a collaboration platform that was acquired by Salesforce in 2016. That acquisition propelled him into the most senior ranks of the enterprise software company, where he would eventually take the co-CEO title in 2021. Taylor left Salesforce in January.

The executive launched his own artificial intelligence venture alongside a former Google executive in February. It isn't clear whether Taylor's involvement with his own AI startup will cease with his appointment to lead OpenAI's board.\u00a0

Taylor did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

Larry Summers at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
David A. Grogan | CNBC

Larry Summers

Larry Summers served as Treasury secretary during the Clinton administration and was the president of Harvard University. An economist by training, Summers also led the Obama administration's National Economic Council during the Global Financial Crisis.\u00a0

His connections in Washington could be valuable for OpenAI as the company faces continued regulatory scrutiny from lawmakers.\u00a0

In December, Summers called OpenAI's popular generative chatbot ChatGPT a "profound thing for humanity" during an interview with Bloomberg. He compared the advent of the technology to the introduction of the printing press and electricity.\u00a0

"This could be the most important general-purpose technology since the wheel or fire," Summers said.\u00a0

Summers also serves on the board of Block, a financial technology company led by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, and on the board of Skillsoft, an educational technology company.\u00a0

Summers stepped down in 2006 from Harvard's presidency following backlash on campus about comments he made on gender representation in STEM fields at a diversity conference.\u00a0Summers later apologized for the remarks, saying in a 2005 letter that he was "wrong to have spoken in a way that has resulted in an unintended signal of discouragement to talented girls and women."

A representative for Summers declined to comment.

Adam D'Angelo

Adam D'Angelo is the only member of OpenAI's previous board who still holds a seat. He joined in 2018 and reportedly played a major role in the negotiations that brought Altman back to the helm.\u00a0

D'Angelo is the CEO of Quora, a platform where users can publicly ask and answer questions. He is also developing an AI chat platform called Poe, which he announced in February. He spent several years at Meta, formerly known as Facebook, and served as CTO from 2006 to 2008.

He has not commented publicly since Altman's ouster Friday, but he retweeted a post on X that suggested his motives were not "crazy" or "vindictive." OpenAI's board fired Altman on Friday after determining he was "not consistently candid in his communications," but its members never elaborated further.\u00a0

D'Angelo did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

Here's who's no longer on OpenAI's board\u00a0

Helen Toner, Director of Strategy and Foundational Research Grants at Georgetown's CSET speaks onstage during Vox Media's 2023 Code Conference at The Ritz-Carlton, Laguna Niguel on September 27, 2023 in Dana Point, California.
Jerod Harris | Getty Images

Helen Toner

Helen Toner is a researcher and director of strategy and foundational research grants at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology. Toner was a former employee at Open Philanthropy, serving as an advisor on AI policy.\u00a0

Toner offered what could be seen as public criticism of OpenAI in an October paper, a decision with which Altman reportedly took issue. The paper suggested that OpenAI's launch of ChatGPT undermined the company's efforts to develop AI safely, by spurring other tech companies into launching their own competing chatbots and forcing them to "accelerate or circumvent internal safety and ethics review processes."

She was one of the directors involved in pushing Altman out. She has not responded to CNBC's previous attempts to contact her.

Director of Business Development for Geosim Tasha McCauley attends the 2014 Kairos Global Summit at Ritz-Carlton Laguna Nigel on October 17, 2014 in Dana Point, California.
Jerod Harris | Getty Images

Tasha McCauley

Tasha McCauley joined OpenAI's board in 2018. She is an adjunct senior management scientist at Rand Corporation, and formerly served as the CEO of GeoSim Systems, which developed an automated city modeling system.\u00a0

She is married to actor and filmmaker Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who announced the union in 2015.\u00a0

McCauley has not commented publicly since Altman's firing Friday. She did not respond to CNBC's requests for comment.\u00a0

Ilya Sutskever, Russian Israeli-Canadian computer scientist and co-founder and Chief Scientist of OpenAI, speaks at Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv on June 5, 2023.
Jack Guez | AFP | Getty Images

Ilya Sutskever

Ilya Sutskever co-founded OpenAI and serves as its chief scientist. He also aligned himself, for a time, with the board members who ousted Altman.

Sutskever is the author or co-author of more than 130 research papers on artificial intelligence, neural networks, and generative AI, according to his Google Scholar profile. He holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Toronto and had a brief post-doctoral stint at Stanford, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Sutskever co-led OpenAI alongside president Greg Brockman, an idea that Altman at the time described as "non-traditional." Sutskever is close with Brockman and officiated his wedding at OpenAI headquarters in 2019.\u00a0

A personal plea from Brockman's wife reportedly helped bring Sutskever back into Altman's camp. Sutskever was one of the first signatories on a letter signed by the vast majority of OpenAI employees that demanded the board's resignation over the weekend. He repudiated his support for the board in a post on X.

Despite his about-face, Sutskever was removed from the board. His status as an OpenAI executive does not appear to have changed.

What's next?

Sam Altman, chief executive officer (CEO) of OpenAI and inventor of the AI software ChatGPT, joins the Technical University of Munich (TUM) for a panel discussion.\u00a0
Sven Hoppe | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

Semafor reported that Altman had been pushing for months to add more directors at OpenAI, and reports suggest it's unlikely that OpenAI's board will remain this small.

Bloomberg said Thursday that among the changes Microsoft wanted was a larger and more experienced board. The board is currently smaller, and it's unclear what, if any, kind of other protections or role on the board Microsoft might get.

The composition of the new board \u2014 experienced technology and business executives \u2014 suggests that OpenAI may be transforming into a more conventional Silicon Valley startup on paper, not just in spirit.

The new governance, however, does not change the fact that OpenAI remains a "capped-profit" entity owned by a nonprofit, with excess profits continuing to flow up to that nonprofit.\u00a0

", + "page_last_modified": "" + }, + { + "page_name": "Who's on the OpenAI board \u2014 the group behind Sam Altman's ouster", + "page_url": "https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/18/heres-whos-on-openais-board-the-group-behind-sam-altmans-ouster.html", + "page_snippet": "As of this week, OpenAI's six-person board included OpenAI co-founder and President Greg Brockman, who was also chairman of the board; Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI's chief scientist; Adam D'Angelo; Tasha McCauley; Helen Toner; and Altman himself. The company began publicly posting its board's member ...On Friday, the board of OpenAI, the buzzy AI company behind viral chatbot ChatGPT, suddenly and publicly ousted its CEO Sam Altman. The announcement came one day after he appeared publicly on behalf of his company at Thursday's APEC CEO Summit. As of this week, OpenAI's six-person board included OpenAI co-founder and President Greg Brockman, who was also chairman of the board; Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI's chief scientist; Adam D'Angelo; Tasha McCauley; Helen Toner; and Altman himself. The company began publicly posting its board's member list on its website in July, after the departures of LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman, director of Neuralink Shivon Zilis and former Texas congressman Will Hurd. Greg Brockman: An OpenAI co-founder, Brockman quit his role at the company on Friday in protest of Altman's ousting, saying publicly, \"Sam and I are shocked and saddened by what the board did today.\" Brockman spent five years as CTO of Stripe before moving on to help launch OpenAI. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, attends the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) CEO Summit in San Francisco, California, U.S. November 16, 2023. ... On Friday, the board of OpenAI, the buzzy AI company behind viral chatbot ChatGPT, suddenly and publicly ousted its CEO Sam Altman.", + "page_result": "Who's on the OpenAI board \u2014 the group behind Sam Altman's ouster

Tech

Who's on the OpenAI board \u2014 the group behind Sam Altman's ouster

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, attends the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) CEO Summit in San Francisco, California, U.S. November 16, 2023.
Carlos Barria | Reuters

On Friday, the board of OpenAI, the buzzy AI company behind viral chatbot ChatGPT, suddenly and publicly ousted its CEO Sam Altman. The announcement came one day after he appeared publicly on behalf of his company at Thursday's APEC CEO Summit.

OpenAI's board said it conducted "a deliberative review process" and that Altman "was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities."

"The board no longer has confidence in his ability to continue leading OpenAI," the board's statement continued.

As of this week, OpenAI's six-person board included OpenAI co-founder and President Greg Brockman, who was also chairman of the board; Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI's chief scientist; Adam D'Angelo; Tasha McCauley; Helen Toner; and Altman himself. The company began publicly posting its board's member list on its website in July, after the departures of LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman, director of Neuralink Shivon Zilis and former Texas congressman Will Hurd.

Here's a rundown of the board behind the controversial shake-up:

Greg Brockman: An OpenAI co-founder, Brockman quit his role at the company on Friday in protest of Altman's ousting, saying publicly, "Sam and I are shocked and saddened by what the board did today." Brockman spent five years as CTO of Stripe before moving on to help launch OpenAI. In 2020, Brockman said OpenAI's top obstacle in its first five years was the idea that making the full extent of the startup's work public wasn't necessarily beneficial for humanity, in his eyes. At the time, he said, "We realized that as these things get powerful, they're dual-use...and that we as technology developers have a responsibility to not just say, 'Hey, we built this thing, it's up to the world to decide how to use it.'"

Ilya Sutskever: As of now, Sutskever is the sole remaining OpenAI co-founder on the board. After co-founding DNNResearch -- an AI startup focused on neural networks -- and selling it to Google, Sutskever joined Google as a research scientist and stayed for nearly three years before moving on to OpenAI as a co-founder and research director. Since November 2018, he's been the company's chief scientist.

Adam D'Angelo: The current CEO of Quora, a social platform for questions and answers, D'Angelo spent nearly four years at Facebook and was CTO of the tech giant from 2006 to 2008. He is not an employee at OpenAI.

Tasha McCauley: McCauley, who is not an OpenAI employee, is on the board of directors of both OpenAI and GeoSim Systems, a geospatial tech company. She is an adjunct senior management scientist at Rand Corporation and has been on the OpenAI board since 2018.

Helen Toner: Toner is a board member and non-OpenAI employee who spent time at the University of Oxford's Center for the Governance of AI, and has been a director of strategy for Georgetown's Center for Security and Emerging Technology for nearly five years. Last year, Toner told the Journal of Political Risk that, "Building AI systems that are safe, reliable, fair, and interpretable is an enormous open problem... Organizations building and deploying AI will also have to recognize that beating their competitors to market\u2014 or to the battlefield \u2014 is to no avail if the systems they're fielding are buggy, hackable, or unpredictable."

Earlier this year, Microsoft's expanded investment in OpenAI \u2014 an additional $10 billion \u2014 made it the biggest AI investment of the year, according to PitchBook. In April, the startup reportedly closed a $300 million share sale at a valuation between $27 billion and $29 billion, with investments from firms such as Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. Despite its significant investment, however, Microsoft has no board seat at OpenAI.

"While our partnership with Microsoft includes a multibillion-dollar investment, OpenAI remains an entirely independent company governed by the OpenAI Nonprofit," OpenAI has publicly stated. "Microsoft has no board seat and no control. And... AGI is explicitly carved out of all commercial and IP licensing agreements. These arrangements exemplify why we chose Microsoft as our compute and commercial partner."

Microsoft had no new comments to add on Saturday and requests for comments from board members weren't immediately returned to CNBC.

OpenAI's product feature announcements earlier this month showed that one of the hottest companies in tech has been rapidly evolving its offerings in an effort to stay ahead of rivals like Anthropic, Google\u00a0and Meta\u00a0in the AI arms race.

ChatGPT, which broke records as the fastest-growing consumer app in history months after its launch, now has about 100 million weekly active users, OpenAI said this month. More than 92% of Fortune 500 companies use the platform, up from 80% in August, and they span across industries like financial services, legal applications and education, according to Mira Murati, OpenAI's CTO-turned-interim CEO.

The news of Altman's ousting comes after OpenAI's Dev Day, the company's first in-person event, on Nov. 6, which also included a surprise appearance by Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.

"The systems that are needed as you aggressively push forward on your road map require us to be on the top of our game, and we intend fully to commit ourselves fully to making sure you all... have not only the best systems for training and inference, but also the most compute," Nadella told Altman while onstage together at Dev Day. He added, "That's the way we're going to make progress."

On that day, Altman told Nadella, "I think we have the best partnership in tech and I'm excited for us to build AGI together."

As recently as last month, OpenAI was reportedly in talks to close a deal that would lead to an $80 billion valuation. When CNBC asked OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap about that deal, he declined to comment.

At OpenAI's Dev Day, in response to a CNBC question about GPT-5, Altman said, "We want to do it, but we don't have a timeline."

", + "page_last_modified": "" + }, + { + "page_name": "Sam Altman returns as CEO, OpenAI has a new initial board", + "page_url": "https://openai.com/blog/sam-altman-returns-as-ceo-openai-has-a-new-initial-board", + "page_snippet": "Your efforts helped enable this incredible organization to continue to serve its mission to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity. We are thrilled that Sam, Mira and Greg are back together leading the company and driving it forward. We look forward to working ...Bret, Larry, and Adam will be working very hard on the extremely important task of building out a board of diverse perspectives, improving our governance structure and overseeing an independent review of recent events. I look forward to working closely with them on these crucial steps so everyone can be confident in the stability of OpenAI. On behalf of the OpenAI Board, I want to express our gratitude to the entire OpenAI community, especially all the OpenAI employees, who came together to help find a path forward for the company over the past week. Your efforts helped enable this incredible organization to continue to serve its mission to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity. We are thrilled that Sam, Mira and Greg are back together leading the company and driving it forward. We look forward to working with them and all of you. As a Board, we are focused on strengthening OpenAI\u2019s corporate governance. We will build a qualified, diverse Board of exceptional individuals whose collective experience represents the breadth of OpenAI\u2019s mission \u2013 from technology to safety to policy. We are pleased that this Board will include a non-voting observer for Microsoft. As previously stated, the OpenAI Board convened a committee consisting of Bret Taylor and Larry Summers to oversee the review of recent events. The committee interviewed several leading law firms to conduct the review, and ultimately selected Anjan Sahni and Hallie B. Levin from WilmerHale.", + "page_result": "\n\n\nSam Altman returns as CEO, OpenAI has a new initial board\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
Blog

Sam Altman returns as CEO, OpenAI has a new initial board

Mira Murati as CTO, Greg Brockman returns as President. Read messages from CEO Sam Altman and board chair Bret Taylor.

November 29, 2023

Authors

Below are messages CEO Sam Altman and board chair Bret Taylor shared with the company this afternoon.

Message from Sam to the company

I am returning to OpenAI as CEO. Mira will return to her role as CTO. The new initial board will consist of Bret Taylor (Chair), Larry Summers, and Adam D\u2019Angelo.

I have never been more excited about the future. I am extremely grateful for everyone\u2019s hard work in an unclear and unprecedented situation, and I believe our resilience and spirit set us apart in the industry. I feel so, so good about our probability of success for achieving our mission.

Before getting to what comes next, I\u2019d like to share some thanks.

I love and respect Ilya, I think he's a guiding light of the field and a gem of a human being. I harbor zero ill will towards him. While Ilya will no longer serve on the board, we hope to continue our working relationship and are discussing how he can continue his work at OpenAI.

I am grateful to Adam, Tasha, and Helen for working with us to come to this solution that best serves the mission. I\u2019m excited to continue to work with Adam and am sincerely thankful to Helen and Tasha for investing a huge amount of effort in this process.

Thank you also to Emmett who had a key and constructive role in helping us reach this outcome. Emmett\u2019s dedication to AI safety and balancing stakeholders\u2019 interests was clear.

Mira did an amazing job throughout all of this, serving the mission, the team, and the company selflessly throughout. She is an incredible leader and OpenAI would not be OpenAI without her. Thank you.

Greg and I are partners in running this company. We have never quite figured out how to communicate that on the org chart, but we will. In the meantime, I just wanted to make it clear. Thank you for everything you have done since the very beginning, and for how you handled things from the moment this started and over the last week.

The leadership team\u2013Mira, Brad, Jason, Che, Hannah, Diane, Anna, Bob, Srinivas, Matt, Lilian, Miles, Jan, Wojciech, John, Jonathan, Pat, and many more\u2013is clearly ready to run the company without me. They say one way to evaluate a CEO is how you pick and train your potential successors; on that metric I am doing far better than I realized. It\u2019s clear to me that the company is in great hands, and I hope this is abundantly clear to everyone. Thank you all.

Jakub, Szymon, and Aleksander are exceptional talents and I\u2019m so happy they have rejoined to move us and our research forward. Thank you.

To all of you, our team: I am sure books are going to be written about this time period, and I hope the first thing they say is how amazing the entire team has been. Now that we\u2019re through all of this, we didn\u2019t lose a single employee. You stood firm for each other, this company, and our mission. One of the most important things for the team that builds AGI safely is the ability to handle stressful and uncertain situations, and maintain good judgment throughout. Top marks. Thank you all.

Satya, Kevin, Amy, and Brad have been incredible partners throughout this, with exactly the right priorities all the way through. They\u2019ve had our backs and were ready to welcome all of us if we couldn\u2019t achieve our primary goal. We clearly made the right choice to partner with Microsoft and I\u2019m excited that our new board will include them as a non-voting observer. Thank you.

To our partners and users, thank you for sticking with us. We really felt the outpouring of support and love, and it helped all of us get through this. The fact that we did not lose a single customer will drive us to work even harder for you, and we are all excited to get back to work.

Will Hurd, Brian Chesky, Bret Taylor and Larry Summers put their lives on hold and did an incredible amount to support the mission. I don\u2019t know how they did it so well, but they really did. Thank you.

Ollie also put his life on hold this entire time to just do everything he could to help out, in addition to providing his usual unconditional love and support. Thank you and I love you.

So what\u2019s next?

We have three immediate priorities.

Advancing our research plan and further investing in our full-stack safety efforts, which have always been critical to our work. Our research roadmap is clear; this was a wonderfully focusing time. I share the excitement you all feel; we will turn this crisis into an opportunity! I\u2019ll work with Mira on this.

Continuing to improve and deploy our products and serve our customers. It\u2019s important that people get to experience the benefits and promise of AI, and have the opportunity to shape it. We continue to believe that great products are the best way to do this. I\u2019ll work with Brad, Jason and Anna to ensure our unwavering commitment to users, customers, partners and governments around the world is clear.

Bret, Larry, and Adam will be working very hard on the extremely important task of building out a board of diverse perspectives, improving our governance structure and overseeing an independent review of recent events. I look forward to working closely with them on these crucial steps so everyone can be confident in the stability of OpenAI.\u00a0

I am so looking forward to finishing the job of building beneficial AGI with you all\u2014best team in the world, best mission in the world.

Love,

Sam

Message from Bret to the company

On behalf of the OpenAI Board, I want to express our gratitude to the entire OpenAI community, especially all the OpenAI employees, who came together to help find a path forward for the company over the past week. Your efforts helped enable this incredible organization to continue to serve its mission to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity. We are thrilled that Sam, Mira and Greg are back together leading the company and driving it forward. We look forward to working with them and all of you.\u00a0

As a Board, we are focused on strengthening OpenAI\u2019s corporate governance. Here\u2019s how we plan to do it:

  • We will build a qualified, diverse Board of exceptional individuals whose collective experience represents the breadth of OpenAI\u2019s mission \u2013 from technology to safety to policy. We are pleased that this Board will include a non-voting observer for Microsoft.
  • We will further stabilize the OpenAI organization so that we can continue to serve our mission.\u00a0 This will include convening an independent committee of the Board to oversee a review of the recent events.
  • We will enhance the governance structure of OpenAI so that all stakeholders \u2013 users, customers, employees, partners, and community members \u2013 can trust that OpenAI will continue to thrive.

OpenAI is a more important institution than ever before. ChatGPT has made artificial intelligence a part of daily life for hundreds of millions of people. Its popularity has made AI \u2013 its benefits and its risks \u2013 central to virtually every conversation about the future of governments, business, and society.

We understand the gravity of these discussions and the central role of OpenAI in the development and safety of these awe-inspiring new technologies. Each of you plays a critical part in ensuring that we effectively meet these challenges.\u00a0 We are committed to listening and learning from you, and I hope to speak with you all very soon.

We are grateful to be a part of OpenAI, and excited to work with all of you.

Thank you,
Bret Taylor
Chair, OpenAI

Update on December 8, 2023 from Bret Taylor, Chair, OpenAI Board

As previously stated, the OpenAI Board convened a committee consisting of Bret Taylor and Larry Summers to oversee the review of recent events. The committee interviewed several leading law firms to conduct the review, and ultimately selected Anjan Sahni and Hallie B. Levin from WilmerHale. Anjan and Hallie have extensive experience, and we have full confidence in their ability to conduct an effective and timely review. While the review is ongoing, the Board will continue to take steps to strengthen OpenAI\u2019s corporate governance, build a qualified and diverse board of exceptional individuals, and oversee OpenAI\u2019s important mission in ensuring that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.


Authors

\n", + "page_last_modified": " Sat, 09 Mar 2024 03:17:11 GMT" + }, + { + "page_name": "Mira Murati replaces Sam Altman; OpenAI board structure explained", + "page_url": "https://www.axios.com/2023/11/19/openai-board-structure-sam-altman-mira-murati", + "page_snippet": "Chief technology officer Mira Murati was named interim CEO while the company conducts a formal search. The intrigue: In another plot twist, Altman was reportedly in discussions to return to the company, pet The Verge and The Wall Street Journal. OpenAI was founded roughly eight years ago as ...The big picture: The OpenAI board's unusual structure led to the shocking ejection of its founding CEO, whose tenure highlighted philosophical divisions over the perils and promise of rapidly advancing generative AI. Hoffman, who is also on Microsoft's board, notably stepped down from the board in March, citing intent to invest in companies that could use OpenAI's software. Hoffman also co-founded his own AI company (Inflection AI) in 2022. Former Rep. Will Hurd (R-Texas) stepped away from the board to run for president. The company's president Greg Brockman hours later stepped down, after being removed as board chairman. Chief technology officer Mira Murati was named interim CEO while the company conducts a formal search. The intrigue: In another plot twist, Altman was reportedly in discussions to return to the company, pet The Verge and The Wall Street Journal. OpenAI was founded roughly eight years ago as a not-for-profit organization \"to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.\" In 2019 Altman became CEO of OpenAI and architected a restructuring that in a sense, allowed for his own downfall. The board as of Friday had contained six members, including Altman and Brockman. The remaining members included:", + "page_result": "Mira Murati replaces Sam Altman; OpenAI board structure explained
Nov 18, 2023 - Technology

What to know about OpenAI after CEO Sam Altman's bombshell firing

\"\"

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella (R) speaks as then-OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (L) looks on during the OpenAI DevDay event on November 06, 2023 in San Francisco, California. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The dramatic double founder exit this week at OpenAI has captivated Silicon Valley, posing potentially steep consequences for the entire tech industry.

The big picture: The OpenAI board's unusual structure led to the shocking ejection of its founding CEO, whose tenure highlighted philosophical divisions over the perils and promise of rapidly advancing generative AI.

  • Sam Altman's firing Friday stunned seemingly everyone from the company's employees and executive team to its most vital investor Microsoft. The company's president Greg Brockman hours later stepped down, after being removed as board chairman.
  • Chief technology officer Mira Murati was named interim CEO while the company conducts a formal search.

The intrigue: In another plot twist, Altman was reportedly in discussions to return to the company, pet The Verge and The Wall Street Journal.

Who started OpenAI, and what does it do?

OpenAI was founded roughly eight years ago as a not-for-profit organization "to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity."

  • Its initial founders included Altman \u2014\u00a0known as a well-connected entrepreneur who bankrolled hot startups via accelerator Y Combinator.
  • Others included: Brockman, former OpenAI president and former CTO of Stripe; LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman; Y Combinator founding partner Jessica Livingston; ex-PayPal CEO and Republican donor Peter Thiel; Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk; and Ilya Sutskever, a deep learning advocate.
  • Musk, who now owns X, notably was seen as an Altman ally in OpenAI's earliest days. Since leaving the firm, he's doubled down on his criticism of AI's rapid advancement, though it's never been entirely clear if he's motivated by morals or business. (Musk launched an AI startup this year and released a new chatbot earlier this month.)

The firm evolved beyond its initial research organization to become more focused on product, particularly under Altman.

  • But the AI field changed soon after with the emergence of text and image models trained on vast hoards of data. As this promising development path began to pay off with concrete results, the research also became increasingly expensive.

In 2019 Altman became CEO of OpenAI and architected a restructuring that in a sense, allowed for his own downfall.

Who was on the board of OpenAI?

The board as of Friday had contained six members, including Altman and Brockman. The remaining members included:

  • Ilya Sutskever, also OpenAI chief scientist
  • Adam D'Angelo, CEO of search query site Quora
  • Tasha McCauley, a technology entrepreneur and an adjunct RAND Corporation scientist
  • Helen Toner, an academic and director at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology

Between the lines: The board's members appeared to have split, with Altman and Brockman on one side and Sutskever, on the other, per Bloomberg. The root of the divisions stemmed from disagreements over Altman's work to speedily popularize and commercialize generative AI.

Of note: The board has undergone significant changes in membership this year.

  • Hoffman, who is also on Microsoft's board, notably stepped down from the board in March, citing intent to invest in companies that could use OpenAI's software. Hoffman also co-founded his own AI company (Inflection AI) in 2022.
  • Former Rep. Will Hurd (R-Texas) stepped away from the board to run for president.

How is OpenAI structured?

Under an unusual corporate governance structure, the nonprofit created a for-profit subsidiary that could take huge investments from companies like Microsoft to fund the development of what would become GPT-3, GPT-4 and ChatGPT.

  • The New York Times reports: "But it retained the nonprofit's mission and it gave the nonprofit's board the power to govern the activities of the capped-profit entity, including firing the chief executive."

The company established a broad alliance with Microsoft, which invested heavily in the company and provided cloud computing resources that enabled OpenAI to develop the GPT series of large language models.

Our thought bubble, from Axios' Dan Primack: The highly unusual and unique structure is not a typical playbook, but helped cover the massive computing costs of running ChatGPT.

Who is Sam Altman?

Altman grew up in a St. Louis suburb and attended Stanford University, where he conducted research on AI. He ultimately dropped out and co-founded his first company, Loopt, a now-defunct location-sharing service.

  • His rise came in the mid-2010's when he was tapped to run Y Combinator, which invested in companies from Stripe to Airbnb.

One for the road: Ever goal-oriented in the tech-founder mold, Altman challenges himself with 100-mile bike rides and "an array of work targets," The New Yorker reported in 2016.

  • Per The Wall Street Journal, he told his grandmother, who died last year, during one of their final visits that he had not been to a grocery store in as many as five years.

Why was he fired?

The full story behind Altman's firing was not clear as of Saturday evening. But the root of the conflict appears to lie in disagreements over Altman's work to speedily popularize and commercialize generative AI.

  • OpenAI's explanation for Altman's firing charged that he was "not consistently candid" with the board.
  • Per an internal memo obtained by Axios, he was not fired for "malfeasance" but rather a "breakdown in communications" with the board.

How much of OpenAI does Sam Altman own?

He doesn't own direct shares in the company, he has said.

  • The WSJ reported that he opted against financial stake in the company, "citing his concern regarding the use of profit as an incentive in AI development."
  • He's also advocated for government regulation around AI. During an appearance before Congress in May, he repeatedly said he'd welcome legislation in the space.

How much of OpenAI does Microsoft own/ invest in?

Microsoft has a sizable minority stake in OpenAI and is its single largest investor. Its $10 billion injection into the company has been called "unprecedented" by Pitchbook.

  • Microsoft's announcement earlier this year of its expanding investment came months after OpenAI rolled out ChatGPT for public use \u2014 providing vital funding for the scaling and improvement of the product.

Axios' Dan Primack and Scott Rosenberg contributed to this story.

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