This article seems to be coming from a perspective that Microsoft somehow poached Sam and team. After looking at the events of the weekend, it's clear to me that the OpenAI board is solely responsible for the events that conspired. I imagine the timeline of events will be studied in the future as an example of how not to fire your CEO.
tempsy|2 years ago
JeremyNT|2 years ago
Maybe the board thought they could get some concessions from Altman/MS by playing hardball, and it just backfired on them. Or maybe they already knew that it was too late, and that by antagonizing MS and imploding OpenAI they might shake "something" unexpected loose to their own benefit.
c4wrd|2 years ago
The fact that Microsoft might not have directly recruited Sam and his team is less significant in light of their promise of substantial growth, which ultimately swayed Sam's decision, whether he consciously realizes this or not. This now leads to him misrepresenting information to the board, leading to his removal. This scenario humorously mirrors a common personal dilemma: choosing between financial gain and leading a meaningful, sustainable life. Sam's choice is hyperbolically likened to 'selling one's soul to the devil', reflecting this paradox.
croes|2 years ago
Based on what?
meiraleal|2 years ago
Studied by who? It is the board of a non-profit company that doesn't have "maximize shareholders profits" as reason to exist. This will be studied as one more capitalist takeover. I hope it somehow goes bad for Microsoft.
thelittleone|2 years ago
Uehreka|2 years ago
But until we have evidence for any of these remote theories, I’d argue they’re all equally uninteresting.
dkjaudyeqooe|2 years ago
They've always been mediocre and probably always will, I can't see any particular purchase, or poach, changing that.
But they do have heaps of money. It's not clear that will be enough.
autoexec|2 years ago
Worse, they're increasingly user-hostile. Any tech in their hands can't be trusted to respect users.