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OpenAI is undergoing significant changes, with several high-level executives leaving the company and a restructuring of its corporate structure in the works. CEO Sam Altman is set to receive shares for the first time.

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On Wednesday, long-time CTO Mira Murati announced her departure from OpenAI. In a post on Platform X, she explained that she had made the difficult decision to leave after careful consideration.

Altman responded to Murati's announcement with his own post, emphasizing her importance to the company. "Mira has been instrumental in the progress and growth of OpenAI over the past 6.5 years," he wrote. "She has been a hugely important factor in our evolution from an unknown research lab to a major company."

While saddened by Murati's decision, Altman expressed his support for her choice. He noted that Murati had built a strong team of executives over the past year who would continue to drive the company's progress.

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Other executives leave the team

In addition to Murati, Head of Research Bob McGrew and Vice President of Research Barret Zoph are also leaving OpenAI. Altman stressed that these decisions were made independently and by mutual agreement. However, the timing of Murati's decision made it logical to make these changes together to enable a smooth transition to the next generation of leadership.

Altman announced several promotions to replace the departing executives. Mark Chen has been appointed as the new Head of Research and will lead the research department alongside Jakub Pachocki as Chief Scientist. Matt Knight, previously Head of Security, will be promoted to Chief Information Security Officer. Kevin Weil and Srinivas Narayanan will continue to lead the Applied Team, which is responsible for translating the technology into products for businesses and consumers.

Altman also commented on the departures, noting that leadership changes are a natural part of companies, especially fast-growing and demanding ones like OpenAI. He acknowledged the unusual abruptness of the changes but pointed to the reasons Murati had given: There is never a good time, a less abrupt change would have led to rumors, and she wanted to make the move while OpenAI was on an upswing.

These departures follow a number of previous personnel changes which have seen the company lose several senior executives and former founders, including Ilya Sutskever, Andrey Karpathy, John Schulman and Jan Leike. Greg Brockman remains with the company but is currently on an extended sabbatical.

OpenAI becomes for-profit, Altman receives shares

Alongside these personnel changes, OpenAI is planning to fundamentally change its corporate structure. According to insiders, the company is working on transforming its core business into a for-profit benefit corporation that will no longer be controlled by a non-profit board. This restructuring aims to make the company more attractive to investors.

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As part of these changes, CEO Sam Altman is set to receive shares in the for-profit company for the first time. OpenAI could be valued at $150 billion after the restructuring. The non-profit OpenAI organization will continue to exist and hold a minority stake in the for-profit company.

These developments mark a significant turning point for OpenAI, which was founded in 2015 as a non-profit AI research organization. The planned changes could have far-reaching implications for how the company is managed and how it deals with AI risks. At the same time, they are likely to make OpenAI much more attractive to investors.

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Summary
  • OpenAI is undergoing personnel changes: Chief Technical Officer Mira Murati, Chief Research Officer Bob McGrew and Vice President of Research Barret Zoph are leaving the company. CEO Sam Altman announced promotions to fill the positions.
  • The company is planning a reorganization: the core division is to be transformed into a for-profit benefit corporation that is no longer controlled by a non-profit board of directors. This should make OpenAI more attractive to investors.
  • As part of the restructuring, CEO Sam Altman is to receive shares in the company for the first time. OpenAI could be valued at USD 150 billion after the conversion, while the non-profit organization will retain a minority stake.
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Max is managing editor at THE DECODER. As a trained philosopher, he deals with consciousness, AI, and the question of whether machines can really think or just pretend to.
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