Agreement Reached: Sam Altman Makes a Comeback to OpenAI

Agreement Reached: Sam Altman Makes a Comeback to OpenAI

Sam ‍Altman is to return to OpenAI within days​ of‍ his departure and the company appointing⁣ two interim CEOs during ‍the period, OpenAI ⁣announced in a post on X.

“We have ​reached an agreement in principle for ‌Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with ⁢a new initial board ​of Bret Taylor (Chair), Larry Summers, and Adam D’Angelo,” OpenAI said in an update posted to the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

Altman’s departure late last week ⁤from the AI ‌startup because of ⁢a conflict with the ‍board was the subject of⁤ much speculation, as the reasons weren’t clearly spelled out.

“I ‌love OpenAI and have acted to preserve our team and mission. Joining Microsoft was the best decision for us, ⁢and with a new board and Satya’s support, ⁢I’m excited to return to OpenAI and strengthen our partnership with⁤ Microsoft,” Altman posted.

Initially, former Twitch CEO Emmet Shear⁣ was set to‍ replace ⁣Altman.

“It’s ‍clear that the process ‌and communications around Sam’s removal has ⁣been handled very badly, which⁢ has seriously damaged our trust,” Shear said on‍ Monday in a posted on X.

Before Shear ⁤took over the role ‌of interim ‍CEO at OpenAI, the company had ⁣appointed OpenAI CTO Mira Murati as the interim CEO ⁤on Friday. It’s unclear what role Shear or Murati would have in⁣ the company after Altman’s return.

Altman’s firing sparked widespread disapproval⁣ in the tech community, drawing comparisons to Steve Jobs’ ‌infamous dismissal and later successful return ⁢to Apple.

As many ‌as 747 out of 770 OpenAI employees signed a letter threatening to quit and join Microsoft if Altman was not reinstated.

Altman and other‍ key members, including Greg Brockman, were initially set to⁢ join Microsoft to lead a new ‌AI research team, as announced by Microsoft CEO‌ Satya Nadella, following their departure.

Microsoft is a‌ large investor in⁤ OpenAI, and Nadella ⁤appeared pleased that Altman was rejoining the startup ‍company.

“We are ‌encouraged by⁢ the changes ⁣to the OpenAI board. We believe this is a first⁢ essential step on ​a​ path to more ‍stable, well-informed, and effective governance,” Nadella posted on X. “We look forward ​to building on‍ our strong ⁢partnership and delivering the value of​ this next generation of AI to our customers and partners.”

The startup has a ‌corporate structure that’s quite unusual⁢ by Silicon‌ Valley standards.

OpenAI has been organized‍ as‌ a ‍nonprofit ⁢since‌ 2015‍ and is‌ governed by a board overseeing all⁣ activities.

A⁢ 2019 thread on YCombinator’s Hacker News forum,​ written as the firm shifted to a hybrid structure of nonprofit and for-profit entities, sparked debate about its⁤ mission shift, profit motives, and the ethical complexities of AI development.

“Investor returns are ‍capped at 100x, that’s quite a high cap for‍ a ⁢non-profit,” wrote one user who had skepticism about OpenAI’s shift to a hybrid structure and ‍its alignment⁣ with its original non-profit ethos.

Reuters ⁢recently reported that…

2023-11-24 10:41:02
Article from www.computerworld.com rnrn

Exit mobile version