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OpenAI has ‘full confidence’ in CEO Sam Altman after probe, reinstates him to board

OpenAI is reinstating CEO Sam Altman to its board of directors and said it has “full confidence” in his leadership after an outside investigation into the turmoil that led the company to abruptly fire and rehire him in November.

Quick Read

  • OpenAI has reinstated CEO Sam Altman to its board and expressed “full confidence” in his leadership following an investigation into his previous dismissal in November.
  • An outside investigation by WilmerHale concluded Altman’s ouster was due to a breakdown in trust between him and the prior board.
  • Alongside Altman, three new members have been added to OpenAI’s board of directors.
  • This move aims to demonstrate stability and progress past internal conflicts that affected the company last year.
  • Altman’s initial firing and the subsequent leadership shake-up were linked to OpenAI’s unique governance structure, originally founded as a nonprofit.
  • After Altman’s removal, a new board was formed, including former executives from Salesforce, Facebook, and the CEO of Quora, Adam D’Angelo.
  • The WilmerHale investigation involved interviews with former and current OpenAI board members, executives, and witnesses, and a review of numerous documents.
  • OpenAI faces additional challenges, including a lawsuit from co-founder Elon Musk, accusing the company of deviating from its nonprofit mission for profit.
  • The lawsuit and internal disputes raise questions about OpenAI’s governance, openness in research, and its pursuit of advanced AI capabilities.

The Associated Press has the story:

OpenAI has ‘full confidence’ in CEO Sam Altman after probe, reinstates him to board

Newslooks- (AP)

OpenAI is reinstating CEO Sam Altman to its board of directors and said it has “full confidence” in his leadership after an outside investigation into the turmoil that led the company to abruptly fire and rehire him in November.

OpenAI said the investigation by the law firm WilmerHale concluded that Altman’s ouster was a “consequence of a breakdown in the relationship and loss of trust” between Altman and the prior board.

The ChatGPT maker also said it has added three other new members to its board of directors.

The actions are a way for the San Francisco artificial intelligence company to show investors and customers that it is trying to move past the internal conflicts that nearly destroyed it last year and made global headlines.

FILE — OpenAI CEO Sam Altman participates in a discussion during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO Summit, Nov. 16, 2023, in San Francisco. OpenAI is reinstating CEO Altman to its board of directors and said it has “full confidence” in his leadership after a law firm concluded an investigation into the turmoil that led the company to abruptly fire and rehire him in November. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

For more than three months, OpenAI said little about what led its then-board of directors to fire Altman on Nov. 17. An announcement that day said Altman was “not consistently candid in his communications” in a way that hindered the board’s ability to exercise its responsibilities. He was also kicked off the board, along with its chairman, Greg Brockman, who responded by quitting his job as the company’s president.

Much of OpenAI’s conflicts are rooted in its unusual governance structure. Founded as a nonprofit with a mission to safely build futuristic AI that helps humanity, it is now a fast-growing big business still controlled by a nonprofit board bound to its original mission.

Days after his surprise ouster, Altman and his supporters — with backing from most of OpenAI’s workforce and close business partner Microsoft — helped orchestrate a comeback that brought Altman and Brockman back to their executive roles and forced out board members Tasha McCauley, Helen Toner and Ilya Sutskever, though the latter kept his job as chief scientist.

Altman and Brockman did not regain their board seats at that time. But an “initial” new board of three men was formed, led by former Salesforce and Facebook executive Bret Taylor, who also chaired Twitter’s board before Elon Musk took over the platform. The others were former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers and Quora CEO Adam D’Angelo, the only member of the previous board to stay on.

(Both Quora and Taylor’s new startup, Sierra, operate their own AI chatbots that rely in part on OpenAI technology.)

OpenAI had retained the law firm WilmerHale to investigate the events that led to Altman’s ouster. During the probe, OpenAI said WilmerHale conducted dozens of interviews with the company’s prior board, current executives, advisers and other witnesses. The company also said the law firm reviewed thousands of documents and other corporate actions.

The company still has other troubles to contend with, including a lawsuit filed by billionaire Elon Musk, who helped bankroll the early years of OpenAI and was a co-chair of its board after its 2015 founding. Musk alleges that the company is betraying its founding mission in pursuit of profits.

Legal experts have expressed doubt about whether Musk’s arguments, centered around an alleged breach of contract, will hold up in court.

But it has already forced open the company’s internal conflicts about its unusual governance structure, how “open” it should be about its research and how to pursue what’s known as artificial general intelligence, or AI systems that can perform just as well as — or even better than — humans in a wide variety of tasks.

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