An Insight into the Unexpected Developments of an OpenAI Meltdown

An Insight into the Unexpected Developments of an OpenAI Meltdown

remains unclear whether ⁣Sam Altman will return to OpenAI amid rival​ reports that he has taken a job ‍with Microsoft and that the board members at OpenAI who ousted ⁢him are trying ⁢to lure him back” width=”736″ height=”495″>

It remains unclear whether ‌Sam Altman⁣ will return to OpenAI amid rival reports that he has taken a job with Microsoft and that the board​ members at OpenAI who ousted him ‌are trying to lure him back

AFP

Silicon ⁤Valley star Sam Altman‌ was suddenly ousted from the top ‌spot at OpenAI as it led the race to artificial intelligence, only⁤ for the ambitious tech guru to be scooped up by Microsoft.

Here’s a look at the bizarre ‍and dramatic sequence⁣ of events in ⁣the still-unfolding saga that ​has put the future of OpenAI in doubt,‌ even ‍as the technology‍ it champions⁤ is poised to flourish.

Microsoft has been an OpenAI partner⁤ for seven years, pouring billions of⁢ dollars into the startup and weaving its innovations into Microsoft products.

Computing power hosted in the cloud at ⁣Microsoft‌ data centers has been essential to training large-scale language models, making possible ⁢OpenAI’s ChatGPT ‌released‍ a⁢ year ago ⁤for public use.

In exchange, Microsoft has‌ infused ChatGPT technology into software like Word and Outlook sold to customers, and into⁣ its Bing search engine that has long struggled to compete with Google.

Microsoft’s ‌investments have bought it a stake in OpenAI, which remains controlled by the original nonprofit foundation.

Despite that, ​Microsoft was not informed about the OpenAI board’s⁤ decision to fire ‌Altman on Friday and oust co-founder Greg Brockman from the board.

The reason ‌for the shocking move remained ‍unclear⁢ on Tuesday, but some believe it involved a fear OpenAI was ‍moving ⁤too quickly ⁢and straying from its mission of making sure ⁤artificial intelligence benefits humanity.

Microsoft ⁤quickly moved to hire Altman, announcing a ‌deal to have him join‍ the Redmond, Washington-based computing colossus to lead a new artificial intelligence team.

The corporation put out⁢ word its doors are⁢ open to other OpenAI employees ‌who⁢ want ‍to join Altman, and ‍many threatened in a letter to do just that if ⁢Altman didn’t ⁢return.

When asked in a streamed⁤ interview about the possibility of Altman ⁢going back to ‍OpenAI, ⁢Microsoft ⁤chief executive Satya ‌Nadella said he would work ‍with Altman ​where ever he ended up.

Reports have ⁤since‍ surfaced that the OpenAI board is​ trying to win⁢ Altman⁢ back, and that he ‍is open⁤ to discussing the possibility.

Nadella ​has been adamant that “governance changes” are needed at OpenAI to avoid such disruptive surprises.

OpenAI employees, meanwhile, have called⁤ for board members to resign.

Nearly 700 of ⁤OpenAI’s 770 employees have threatened ​to quit‌ if‍ Altman‌ doesn’t return. If that happens, ‍it’s hard to‍ imagine the company surviving.

And while Nadella has stated Microsoft remains ‍committed to its partnership ​with ‍OpenAI, the relationship has been ⁢damaged‌ — along with the value of Microsoft’s⁤ investment.

Even if Altman were to return,‍ the company seen ⁣as leading the​ AI⁢ race has had‍ its momentum stalled as competitors try to⁣ close the gap.

Several start-ups ​have ⁢been created by ⁣OpenAI founders⁣ or engineers, such as Anthropic,​ Elon Musk’s⁣ xAI and ‍InflectionAI.

Tech giants Google ​and Meta are investing heavily in ⁤their own AI⁢ models, Bard and Llama 2, which they integrate into their products.

And private tech firms face ⁤competition from the open source community, which essentially make models freely available for developers to adapt and improve.

Artificial intelligence

2023-11-22 14:41:02
Original from www.ibtimes.com

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