this post was submitted on 28 Sep 2024
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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.

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[–] PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 34 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I think that over the next few years Sam Altman is going to learn the same lessons that events have been trying to teach Elon Musk since circa 2021.

  1. You didn't build that. The people that work for you did.
  2. Being a big hero is contingent on you and your behavior, and can change.
  3. Those people who are giving you all this money aren't your comrades. When your usefulness is at its end, they won't give you a second thought.
[–] ClassifiedPancake@discuss.tchncs.de 10 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Elon Musk is doing fine though

[–] Cityshrimp@lemmy.sdf.org 7 points 1 month ago

Yeah, if anything; Musk is likely an example he’s aspiring to be.