Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella suggests that Sam Altman might return to OpenAI

Date:

Share post:


In interviews on CNBC and Bloomberg TV tonight, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella made it clear that it’s possible Sam Altman, who was fired from his role as CEO at OpenAI by the AI startup’s board of directors on Friday, could return to OpenAI in some capacity.

That’s despite the fact that Altman announced this morning that he intended to join a newly-formed AI research team at Microsoft alongside ex-OpenAI president Greg Brockman and several former OpenAI researchers.

“Obviously, we want Sam and Greg to have a fantastic home if they’re not going to be in OpenAI,” Nadella said in an interview on CNBC. Asked whether Altman would return to OpenAI, Nadella added: “That’s for, you know, [the] OpenAI board and management and the employees to choose … [Microsoft] chose to explicitly partner with OpenAI [and] obviously that depends on the people at OpenAI staying there or coming to Microsoft, so I’m open to both options.”

Nadella’s responses seemingly confirm reporting earlier today from The Verge, which suggested that Altman’s move to Microsoft wasn’t a done deal and that — with the recent change of heart from OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, the reported mastermind behind Altman’s departure — only two of OpenAI’s three remaining board members need to flip to bring back Altman. (Brockman was deposed as the board’s chairman on Friday, and Altman formerly held the sixth seat.)

Nadella also said that Microsoft would want to see “something change around the governance” at OpenAI going forward, including around its investor relations. (Microsoft, along with OpenAI’s other backers and most of OpenAI’s employees, are said to have been notified of Altman’s sacking “minutes” before it was made public.) OpenAI is governed by a nonprofit to which the board belongs, and investors — including Microsoft, which has poured over $10 billion into OpenAI to date  — don’t have seats on said board.

“It’s clear something has to change around the governance — we’ll have a good dialogue with their board on that, and walk through that as that evolves,” Nadella said on CNBC.

It’s been a rollercoaster at OpenAI since Altman’s firing, to say the least.

Over the weekend, OpenAI’s management team and backers — including CTO Mira Murat, who was briefly appointed interim CEO — began vetting candidates to replace the board for Altman’s possible return. Meanwhile, the board conducted its own CEO search, eventually settling on Emmett Shear, the co-founder of Twitch, after GitHub CEO Nat Friedman and Scale AI CEO Alex Wang declined offers.

Shear, who has a colorful history, turned out to be a controversial choice internally. Employees reportedly refused to attend an emergency all-hands scheduled on Sunday with Shear, responding to the announcement in OpenAI’s Slack with a “fuck you” emoji.

OpenAI’s rank-and-file, speaking of, is in widespread revolt — more than 700 of the company’s roughly 770 employees, including Sutskever, have signed a letter calling for the board to resign and reinstate Altman. Among others, Salesforce has attempted to use the unrest as a recruitment opportunity, offering matching compensation to any researcher who’s quit OpenAI to join Salesforce AI research team.

Not helping matters is the board’s reluctance to give detailed reasoning for firing Altman. Shear said in a note to employees Sunday that his first order of business would be to “hire an independent investigator to dig into the entire process leading up to this point and generate a full report.”





Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Google fakes an AI demo, Grand Theft Auto VI goes viral and Spotify cuts jobs

Hey, folks, welcome to Week in Review (WiR), TechCrunch’s regular newsletter that recaps the past few days...

Robotics Q&A with Boston Dynamics’ Aaron Saunders

For the next few weeks, TechCrunch’s robotics newsletter Actuator will be running Q&As with some of the...

System of intelligence — generative AI at the app layer

Jonathan Golden Contributor Jonathan Golden is a partner at NEA and a former director of product at Airbnb. More...

This week in AI: Mistral and the EU’s fight for AI sovereignty

Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI can do...

Gag City is a viral win for Nicki Minaj

Welcome to Gag City, the pink metropolis inhabited by stans and brands alike. In the days leading up...

EU lawmakers bag late night deal on ‘global first’ AI rules

After marathon ‘final’ talks which stretched to almost three days European Union lawmakers have tonight clinched a...

Report: FAA should improve investigation process after a rocket launch goes awry

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has let launch providers conduct their own investigations in nearly every instance...

Apple cuts off Beeper Mini’s access after launch of service that brought iMessage to Android

Was it too good to be true? Beeper, the startup that reverse engineered iMessage to bring blue...