The Facts

  • OpenAI's co-founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Sam Altman has returned to the ChatGPT maker's board of directors after his sudden ousting and subsequent rehiring last November.

  • Based on law firm WilmerHale's review, the OpenAI board has concluded that Altman's "conduct did not mandate removal," adding that he and Greg Brockman remained "the right leaders" for the San Francisco-based artificial intelligence (AI) company.


The Spin

Narrative A

Altman's return caps a dramatic period of upheaval that saw him removed amid justifiably furious debate about the advantages and risks of harnessing AI's potential. Now, OpenAI can finally settle down and refocus on spearheading the world's AI trajectory. Besides Altman's welcome return, the company board has garnered solid experience and leadership to ensure growth and fulfill its mission of ensuring that AI works for the common good of humanity.

Narrative B

Though Sam Altman's return to OpenAI's board appears to lay a confusing episode to rest, the multiple debates in the technology field that set it in motion continue. From concerns over who spearheads the world's movement towards an AI-oriented future, to whether innovation should always be welcomed and whether corporate and public interests are aligned regarding this new frontier, the world still needs answers. Companies like OpenAI cannot be left alone in deciding the answers to these questions which have consequences for all humanity.

Nerd narrative

There's a 1% chance that OpenAI will be a public company on May 31, 2024, according to the Metaculus prediction community.


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