Account
Five Days of Chaos: How Sam Altman Returned to
OpenAI
On Friday, Mr. Altman was pushed out of the hot A.I.
start-up he ran. But an intense pressure campaign and negotiations brought him
back.
By Cade
Metz, Tripp Mickle, Mike Isaac, Karen Weise and Kevin Roose
Reporting
from San Francisco
Nov. 22,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/22/technology/how-sam-altman-returned-openai.html
One of the
strangest episodes in the history of the tech industry ended as start-up events
often do: with a party in San Francisco’s eclectic Mission District.
Late
Tuesday, OpenAI said Sam Altman was returning as its chief executive, five days
after the artificial intelligence start-up’s board of directors forced him out.
At the company’s San Francisco office, giddy employees snacked on chicken
tenders, drank boba tea and champagne, and celebrated Mr. Altman’s return deep
into the night.
Mr.
Altman’s reinstatement capped a corporate drama that mixed piles of money, a
pressure campaign from allies, intense media attention and a steadfast belief
among some in the A.I. community that they should proceed with caution with
what they are building.
Now OpenAI,
which for two days appeared to be on the brink of collapse just a year after
introducing the popular ChatGPT chatbot, will replace a heavily criticized
board of directors with a more traditional group including former Treasury
Secretary Lawrence Summers and a former executive from the software giant
Salesforce.
More board
members, who could be plucked from OpenAI’s biggest investor, Microsoft, and
the A.I. research community, are expected to join soon. Mr. Altman was not
named to the board on Tuesday night, and it was not clear if he ever will be.
On
Wednesday, what appeared to be emerging from the mess was a company better
suited to handle the billions of dollars thrown its way and the attention it
has received since it released ChatGPT. But some already argue that it will not
be as attuned to OpenAI’s original mission to create A.I. that is safe for the
world.
The OpenAI
debacle has illustrated that building A.I. systems is testing whether
businesspeople who want to make money can work in sync with researchers who
worry that what they are developing could eventually eliminate jobs or become a
threat if technologies like autonomous weapons grow out of control.
The tech
industry — perhaps even the world — will be watching to see if OpenAI is any
closer to balancing those dueling aspirations than it was a week ago.
“We’ll look
back on this period as a very brief, highly dramatic blip that gave us a public
and dramatic reset,” said Aaron Levie, the chief executive of Box, an online
data storage provider. “This needs to be a trustworthy organization that’s
aligned with its board, and at the end of it all, OpenAI is a more valuable
organization than it was a week ago.”
When Mr.
Altman, 38, was fired just after noon on Friday, OpenAI was pitched into chaos.
Its employees and Microsoft, which has invested $13 billion in the company,
were blindsided.
The A.I.
company has an unusual governance structure. It is controlled by the board of a
nonprofit, and its investors have no formal way of influencing decisions. But
no one anticipated that four members of the board — including OpenAI’s chief
scientist, Ilya Sutskever, a co-founder — would suddenly remove Mr. Altman,
claiming that he could no longer be trusted with the company mission to build
artificial intelligence that “benefits all of humanity.”
The fallout
was immediate. OpenAI’s president, Greg Brockman, who also helped found the
company eight years ago, quit in protest.
The board
had grown increasingly frustrated with Mr. Altman’s behavior over the last year
and thought it needed to get him under control, according to two people
familiar with the board’s thinking. One episode, in particular, illustrated how
fraught the relationship between the board and Mr. Altman had become.
Both sides
focused on an October research paper co-written by Helen Toner, an OpenAI board
member who serves as a director of strategy at Georgetown University’s Center
for Security and Emerging Technology.
Mr. Altman
complained to Ms. Toner that the paper seemed to criticize OpenAI’s efforts to
keep its technologies safe while praising a rival. He argued that “any amount
of criticism from a board member carries a lot of weight,” he wrote in an email
to colleagues.
Ms. Toner
defended the paper as academic research, but Mr. Altman and other OpenAI
leaders, including Mr. Sutskever, later discussed whether she should be removed
from the board, a person involved in the conversations said.
But Mr.
Sutskever, who is worried that A.I. could one day destroy humanity,
unexpectedly sided with Ms. Toner and two other board members: Adam D’Angelo,
chief executive of the question-and-answer site Quora, and Tasha McCauley, an
adjunct senior management scientist at the RAND Corporation.
During a
video call on Friday, Mr. Sutskever read Mr. Altman a statement that said Mr.
Altman was being fired because he was not “consistently candid in his
communications with the board.”
Over the
next five days, Mr. Altman and his allies pressed the board to bring him back
and for the board to resign. On Sunday, he and company executives negotiated at
OpenAI’s offices. In the early afternoon, a delivery driver with a dozen drinks
from the Boba Guys chain arrived on a motorbike outside with two bags. Then a
second delivery driver appeared.
That night,
the talks collapsed, and the board named Emmett Shear, a co-founder of Twitch,
as interim chief executive.
But
Microsoft offered a Plan B: to hire Mr. Altman to run a new A.I. research lab
for Microsoft with Mr. Brockman. OpenAI’s executives orchestrated a letter from
employees saying they’d follow Mr. Altman to Microsoft if he wasn’t reinstated.
More than 700 of OpenAI’s 770 employees signed, including Mr. Sutskever, who
said in a post on X that he “deeply regretted” his role in ousting Mr. Altman.
The
pressure made the other board members dig in their heels, three people familiar
with their thinking said. They were appalled that Mr. Altman and his allies
were encouraging a mutiny, and wondered if it could be illegal because the
employees had a contractual obligation to the company, not to its chief
executive. And they thought that as a board they were acting with integrity and
fulfilling their obligation to the nonprofit’s mission.
The board
was still determined to force Mr. Altman to change his behavior, two people
familiar with the board’s deliberations said. It also had concerns about some
of his recent efforts to raise funds for personal interests, such as a drug
development start-up, at the same time that he was raising money for OpenAI.
The talks
from Saturday through Tuesday centered on how to create a board that everyone
could trust. For the current members, that meant finding directors who would
check Mr. Altman’s power and push for an independent investigation into his
behavior.
While
Microsoft supported Mr. Altman’s return to OpenAI, the company worked on backup
plans, one person familiar with the matter said. Microsoft employees started to
prepare offer letters and to line up immigration lawyers for OpenAI staff on
work visas, the person said.
OpenAI’s
three board members spent most of Tuesday on Google Meet video calls,
discussing board options. They spoke with the chief executive of Microsoft,
Satya Nadella, several times, one of these people said.
Mr.
Altman’s allies offered a board slate of Mr. D’Angelo, Mr. Summers and Bret
Taylor, a seasoned Silicon Valley executive. Mr. Taylor, who will be the new
board’s chair, oversaw the $44 billion sale of Twitter to Elon Musk when he led
Twitter’s board last year.
Mr. Taylor
and Ms. McCauley did not respond to requests for comment. No one involved in
discussions has explained how Mr. Summers became an option, and he did not
respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.
But he has
recently established himself as an authority on A.I. and economics. Mr. Summers
has warned that ChatGPT will come for the “cognitive class,” changing how
doctors make diagnoses, editors work on books and Wall Street traders invest.
He has also served on the boards of other technology companies, including the
financial services company Block, formerly known as Square.
The board
considered Mr. Summers to be an independent thinker with enough management
experience to hold his ground against Mr. Altman, said two of the people
familiar with the negotiations.
By Tuesday
evening, they had a deal. Thanksgiving helped. Despite all their disagreements,
everyone agreed the chaos should not spill into Thursday, one person said.
But there
is still plenty of work to be done. Over the next six months, the board will
analyze and potentially change OpenAI’s unusual structure, one of these people
said.
After the
decision to bring back Mr. Altman, OpenAI workers filled employee Slack
channels with heart emojis and images of a frog, known as “froge,” that has
become an unofficial corporate mascot, three employees said.
Late
Tuesday, employees gathered at the company’s office to drink boba tea — an
inside reference to news coverage over the weekend. Mr. Brockman posted a
selfie with dozens of smiling workers in the office around midnight.
The caption
read: “we are so back.”
Erin
Griffith and Yiwen Lu contributed reporting.
Cade Metz
is a technology reporter and the author of “Genius Makers: The Mavericks Who
Brought A.I. to Google, Facebook, and The World.” He covers artificial
intelligence, driverless cars, robotics, virtual reality and other emerging
areas. More about Cade Metz
Tripp
Mickle reports on Apple and Silicon Valley for The Times and is based in San
Francisco. His focus on Apple includes product launches, manufacturing issues
and political challenges. He also writes about trends across the tech industry,
including layoffs, generative A.I. and robot taxis. More about Tripp Mickle
Mike Isaac
is a technology correspondent for The Times based in San Francisco. He
regularly covers Facebook and Silicon Valley. More about Mike Isaac
Karen Weise
writes about technology and is based in Seattle. Her coverage focuses on Amazon
and Microsoft, two of the most powerful companies in America. More about Karen
Weise
Kevin Roose
is a Times technology columnist and a host of the podcast “Hard Fork.” More
about Kevin Roose
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