All about OpenAI's dramatic firing and rehiring of CEO and why it could mean greater scrutiny - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:40 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

All about OpenAI's dramatic firing and rehiring of CEO and why it could mean greater scrutiny

At OpenAI, the new boss appears to be the same as the old boss that would be CEO Sam Altman, whosebrief ouster from and rapid return tothe San Francisco-based tech firm behind the artificial intelligence tool ChatGPT has been hard to keep up with.

Company behind ChatGPT parted ways with CEO Sam Altman last Friday by Tuesday, he was back

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI participates in the
Sam Altman is seen attending an AI-related event at the Asia-Pacific Economics Cooperation Leaders' Week in San Francisco last week. Altman was briefly ousted from his role as OpenAI CEO last Friday. By Tuesday, he'd been hired back. (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images)

At OpenAI, the new boss appears to be the same as the old boss.

That would be Sam Altman, the 38-year-old CEOwhosebrief ouster and reported pending returntothe San Francisco-based maker of the artificial intelligence tool ChatGPT has been a lotto keep up with.

The recent tumultcan roughly be summed up as follows: Altmanwas ousted from OpenAI lastFriday, hired elsewhere by Monday,and on a return path to OpenAI by Tuesday.

Here's a brief look at whatunfolded at OpenAIand how it may affect the influential company.

Small company, big visibility

Co-founded by Altman as a non-profit with a mission to safely build AI that outperforms humans and benefits humanity, OpenAI later became a for-profit business but one still run by its non-profit board of directors.

"For the longest time, this wasa company that no one had heard about," saidSarah Kreps, director of Cornell University's Tech Policy Institute, in a telephone interviewWednesday.

WATCH | Isanybody listening to warnings about AI?| About That:

AI warnings: Is anybody listening? | About That

1 year ago
Duration 9:27
More than 350 tech leaders, academics and engineers the people who best understand artificial intelligence have signed a dramatic statement, warning AI could be a global threat to humanity on the scale of pandemics and nuclear war. But who's listening?

But soon, OpenAIwas drawing more attention andinvestment, including from Microsoft.The explosion of ChatGPT since its arrival last yearpropelled Altman into the spotlightjust as generative AI was becoming rapidly commercialized.

Altman soonbecame Silicon Valley's most sought-after voice on the promise and potential dangers of this technology.

Kreps says that thoughthere are other bigtech leaders with morenamerecognition, she finds Altman and OpenAI's story"very unique." That's because she says he'sbecome "the global face of this huge technology," whileleading an organization with a much smaller employee basethan other tech companies like Facebook.

Why the drama?

A Fridayannouncement from OpenAI said Altman was found to be"notconsistently candid in his communications" with the company's then-board of directors.

The OpenAI logo is seen on the screen of a mobile phone in New York.
The OpenAI logo appears on a mobile phone in front of a screen showing a portion of the company website in this photo taken in New York on Tuesday. (Peter Morgan/The Associated Press)

The lack of transparency surrounding Altman's firing led to a weekend of internal conflict at the company and growingpressure from investorsparticularly Microsoft.

On Monday, Microsofthired Altman andOpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman, and opened its doors to any OpenAI employees who wanted to join them.

Late Tuesday, OpenAI saidit had reached "an agreement in principle" for Altman to return as CEO under a different board of directors.

Both Altman and Brockman celebrated their returns to the company in social media postsearly Wednesday.

Media reports suggest some of the now-departed board members differed with Altman about OpenAI's direction. Cornell's Krepssuspects such differences only grew as moreinvestmentmeant moreresources and the ability for the companyto move forward faster.

Because Altman and OpenAIareleading players in thefield, his sudden ouster and return mayraise concerns about trust in arapidly expandingtechnology that many arestill questioning.

"The OpenAI episode shows how fragile the AI ecosystem is right now, including addressing AI's risks," said Johann Laux, an expert at the Oxford Internet Institute focusing on human oversight of artificial intelligence.

Duncan Cass-Beggs, executive director of the Global AI Risk Initiative at the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont., said the recent news stories about OpenAI might help drive more attention toongoing AI developments, their potential risks and how they should be regulated.

More power, but more scrutiny

Some corporate governance analysts and experts predicted that Altman's return could strengthen his standing at the company buttressed by strong support from investors, including Microsoft.

"Sam's return may put an end to the turmoil on the surface, but there may continue to be deep governance issues," said Mak Yuen Teen, director of the centre for investor protection at the National University of Singapore Business School.

"Altman seems awfully powerful and it is unclear that any board would be able to oversee him," he said. "The danger is the board becomes a rubber stamp."

Some analysts suggest the management fiasco couldensure that OpenAI executives will proceed more cautiously, as the high-flying startup will now be subject to more scrutiny. Several noted that companies such as Facebook parent Meta have flourished with a powerful CEO despite concerns about corporate governance.

"Sam definitely comes out stronger, but also dirtied and will have more of a microscope from the AI and broader tech and business community," Gartner analyst Jason Wong said. "He can no longer do no wrong."

With files from The Associated Press and Reuters