OpenAI Is Just Like the Rest of Silicon Valley After All

Remember this?

“OpenAI is a non-profit artificial intelligence research company. Our goal is to advance digital intelligence in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return. Since our research is free from financial obligations, we can better focus on a positive human impact.”

That was the founding mission statement of OpenAI. It’s now quite out of date, so let’s do some light editing. Maybe something like:

“OpenAI is an artificial intelligence research company. Our goal is to advance digital intelligence to generate financial return.”

That is much clearer and far more accurate. On Wednesday, Reuters first reported that the company is set to announce a restructuring under which its nonprofit board will lose control over the company’s core business.

The new structure is designed to help make it more attractive to potential investors. Recall that it was OpenAI’s nonprofit board that moved dramatically last November to oust Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman, leaving its biggest backer at the time, Microsoft Corp., wondering if its $10 billion AI strategy was about to turn to dust. A governance change should stop that from happening again.

The move to reduce the board’s control comes as, any day now, OpenAI is expected to confirm that it has received the biggest venture capital investment ever: a $6.5 billion (or more!) injection valuing the company at around $150 billion. Those investors aren’t doing it for the good of humanity; they’re doing it for the good of their funds and partners. Unlike investments made under OpenAI’s original structure, the Wall Street Journal reported, “those who put money into the current round wouldn’t have a cap on the profits they can earn.”