top | item 38364315

If needed, you have a role at Microsoft that matches your compensation

209 points| intellectronica | 2 years ago |twitter.com

249 comments

order
[+] zoogeny|2 years ago|reply
I've already wasted a lot of my own time and energy on this, but I'm starting to get a bit confused on this whole thing. People seem pretty comfortable jumping to a profit-driven motivation for employees potentially leaving OpenAI in pursuit of some kind of loyalty to Altman.

But I'm just thinking of the rancor that has been heaped on Terraform, for example, for changing its license. The argument always seems to be that Hashicorp mislead contributors by claiming to release their contributions as open source and now they've reneged on that deal.

My understanding of OpenAI's mission was that there was a fear that AI being developed inside of big tech companies would provide undue advantage to the very few companies that were able to afford the teams and hardware necessary. Meanwhile the rest of us would be unaware of those advancement being made behind closed doors while those behemoths created an insurmountable gap.

Yet now, for some reason, everyone is literally cheerleading the gutting of OpenAI and gleefully pushing the employees into one of the biggest and most notorious tech giants there ever was.

You almost have to wonder, is this the greatest psychological twist in recent memory? People aren't just OK with them turning into a profit-seeking venture, they are seemingly begging for it. There is almost no opposition to it. And for what? Because of some guy none of us actually knows, who we've only seen on TV? And big tech guys like Paul Graham, Eric Schmidt, Satya Nadella - a literal who's-who of the tech giant oligarchy - are all fawning over this young man, along with visits to the white house, meeting foreign presidents, etc.

We went from "big corps are bad" to "big corps are saviours" in less than a week. And I'm not even sure what we think they are saving us from.

[+] jkeisling|2 years ago|reply
“Open”AI already was an unaccountable big corp. They’ve already refused not only to open their weights but to publish most of their research, to create an insurmountable gap with the rest of the world, and to legislate it in with lobbying. “Openness” merely meant “the API is open to your money”, with opaque “content policies” we had no say in. They had the same unaccountable and opaque power and the same commercial drive, but “for our own good” as they define it unilaterally.

Moving to MSFT merely means they’ll do the same thing, but with a bit more reliability, a bit more fear of liability, and a bit less of the doomerist sanctimony of the original leadership. Better to at least have a bigco with coherent and stable values like money. The bigco “nonprofit” led by the current board has made erratic decisions, has insane longtermist and EA values, and refused to give any meaningful statement about why they did what they did. Inasmuch as they resist commercialization, it’s to have more opacity and more control not less. How can we trust these people with control over AGI? Better to junk the board and deal with straightforward greed rather than hubris.

[+] appplication|2 years ago|reply
Elon has Twitter. Zuck has Facebook. Jeff has WaPo. Sam has HN. Everyone has their media platform that ultimately serves them. I’m not suggesting HN is being directly trolled or manipulated, but I think there is such a tight link between HN and Sam that many of the most active people on this platform in particular either personally know, look up to, benefit from, or are sympathetic to him. The overall effect of this is that he gets overwhelming benefit of the doubt in the absence of much information at all.

People are more loyal to their networks than their principles.

[+] reducesuffering|2 years ago|reply
Bingo. OpenAI was specifically founded as a non-profit to prevent profit>all from turning this into an uncontrolled arms race. Before founding OpenAI Sam Altman wrote "Why You Should Fear Machine Intelligence."[0]

Last week he said, "I believe that this will be the most important and beneficial technology humanity has yet invented. And I also believe that if we’re not careful about it, it can be quite disastrous. And so we have to navigate it carefully."

If you run to Microsoft with the entire team, whose entire mission is an amorphous "stock price go up" (I mean, look at how much people are talking about them figuring out a story before stock market opens on Monday), then you have failed OpenAI's charter and founding purpose.

[0] https://blog.samaltman.com/machine-intelligence-part-1

[+] skygazer|2 years ago|reply
I think the “big tech is evil“ and “SV start-ups will save us” groups both still exist but remain distinct and haven’t coordinated the triggers that make each group become vocal. I don’t think there’s a lot of overlap in their membership, so it’s not like hypocrisy, it’s more like different people believing different things for different reasons.

However there are many other sentiments held reasonably by various subgroups, like, “this board overstepped and hasn’t explained itself to our satisfaction” or “we love our boss, he makes us wealthy,” or “if they take my chatGPT away, I’ll be pissed” or “man , I just invested $13B into this ridiculously governed venture and if I don’t fix this my wealth will never approach Balmer’s”

[+] lazide|2 years ago|reply
Typical burnout change IMO.

Switching from ‘must do good’ to ‘good is impossible, make as much money as possible’ can happen really quick.

The 80’s Era of ‘greed is good’ followed free love and the hippies pretty closely for a reason, IMO.

[+] imperialdrive|2 years ago|reply
I certainly agree. It is absolutely silly, but time and time again it is shown that money moves people. However, I also believe that once a majority of them get 5-10 years in and continue maturing through that, as we all do, they return to OpenAI (or whatever is around in the future) to contribute back in a way that helps all our children's future, not just their own.

The things I stand for now would not have held in the face of millions in comp 10 years ago, so I don't expect the same of others. I only hope they earn whatever it takes to get them to the next level sooner than later. AI does appear to be worth a good fight for humanity.

[+] lom888|2 years ago|reply
It is pretty rich that Microsoft of all companies is now coming in to be seen as the savior and not many people are batting an eye. It's a face turn 20 years in the making. If Facebook, Apple or Google were doing the same I suspect we'd hear more opprobrium.
[+] hintymad|2 years ago|reply
I would guess non-profit or not is not the key. The key, at least to an engineer like me, is whether I can do meaningful work with a reasonable package. The employees in OpenAI are creating history and building amazing career after all, which outweighs the structure of a company or monetary incentives.
[+] iosystem|2 years ago|reply
The impact that corporate shills have on public perception is quite powerful. It's peculiar how the general public acknowledges it in other fields such as entertainment, such as with Hollywood movie stars or prominent musicians. However, people often become frustrated when someone points it out within their own field. Kudos to you for noticing it.
[+] great_psy|2 years ago|reply
Thank you for the sobering perspective. I think we as a collective need to answer this question.
[+] type0|2 years ago|reply
Everyone wants to see Microsoft Skynet to emerge

They should take SkyDrive, remove the Drive part and add all new cool AI made with .NET technology; so that's how we get Skynet /s

[+] yafbum|2 years ago|reply
The premise of founding OpenAI as a nonprofit with "nobler" goals than making money was that it would be a strong magnet to the right talent. Going to work for Microsoft (or any other tech company for that matter), from that point of view, is like crossing over to the dark side of the force. It will be interesting to see how many of OpenAI's employees were there because of its nonprofit status, and how many were there in spite of it.
[+] melvinmelih|2 years ago|reply
I suspect very little people joined OpenAI for their noble non-profit mission after they introduced their for-profit subsidiary. OpenAI compensation was and still is top notch. Compare it to Signal, which is a true non-profit (and salaries are a lot lower).
[+] kolinko|2 years ago|reply
700 out of 770 employees already signed an open letter saying they will consider changing jobs.
[+] DeIlliad|2 years ago|reply
Very few people in tech are in it for noble reasons. Although, a nice pair of golden handcuffs can let you delude yourself into thinking what you are doing is noble. I can't imagine people working on shadow profiles at Facebook think what they are doing is noble.
[+] m3kw9|2 years ago|reply
You join OpenAI because if there is an open spot you’d take it. Plus it’s a famous company doing cutting edge AI, sure you can read the statement, but everyone wants to eat and get a better resume. It’s a bonus thing to feel.

In summary, nobody gaf

[+] rco8786|2 years ago|reply
I would wager a very small % of them care about the legal structure of the business and just wanted to build really cool stuff with Sam.
[+] DonHopkins|2 years ago|reply
If they were in it for purely noble reasons, they would have already left when it became NotOpenAI.
[+] mtrovo|2 years ago|reply
When you're total compensation depends on the for profit part does it really matter?

People talk about the coherence of 700 people signing an open letter as being goal aligned, but I see it more like mortgage payment aligned.

[+] cyanydeez|2 years ago|reply
it didn't preclude a now common cult of personality problem.
[+] jansan|2 years ago|reply
When reading the title I was instantly reminded of "Come to the dark side, we have cookies!"
[+] jasode|2 years ago|reply
>your desire potentially to join Sam Altman at Microsoft’s new AI Research Lab. Know that if needed, you have a role at Microsoft that matches your compensation and advances our collective mission.

The podcast This Week In Startups brought up an interesting point that many OpenAI employees are on corporate sponsored work visas and they really can't jump ship to Microsoft. Those visas are tied to OpenAI.

Not sure how many employees it affects and of those, how many are "key people".

(No doubt that Microsoft already understand the logistics of all this and still want to signal their open arms regardless.)

[+] someotherperson|2 years ago|reply
Microsoft is a juggernaut from every angle that has direct ties to all arms of the U.S. government -- they can petition whatever backdoor deals they need to keep the knowledge and talent inside the U.S. rather than exporting it back overseas. They can angle it as a matter of national security without so much as a hint of difficulty.

Any visa issues will be resolved within a matter of days, not even weeks or months.

[+] sashank_1509|2 years ago|reply
Nope this makes no sense and I say this as someone on a corporate sponsored visa. There are primarily 2 visas. The first most common is H1b, H1b transfers are some of the easiest things to do. I have moved from a trillion dollar company to a 3 person company on a H1b transfer. The company just needs a lawyer to do the paperwork and prove they are a company.

The next visa is O1. O1 visa allows transfer only if you work in the same field/ goal as your original visa. In this case it is straightforward, since they are doing literally the same job in a different company. Microsoft applied for thousands of visas a year, there really is no issue here regarding visas except immigrant employee anxiety.

[+] mynameisvlad|2 years ago|reply
Microsoft is no stranger to the visa process. Several of the visas like H1B allow transfers, albeit it will take time and effort to accomplish.
[+] John23832|2 years ago|reply
Microsoft, the large american tech giant, is trying to save a 10B dollar investment from boneheads who just blew up the company they invested in.

Do you really think they're going to feign an offer to join, but then say "oh your immigration status is too complex"? With all of their resources?

[+] gjsman-1000|2 years ago|reply
H-1B Visas are transferable with an application; and you can legally join a new company before the application is approved (but it’s, of course, just a little risky).

I don’t think employees would expect Microsoft to drop the ball though.

[+] alsodumb|2 years ago|reply
Most work visas can be transferred to new companies fairly easily - it's almost trivial. I don't think thats a big deal.
[+] makestuff|2 years ago|reply
> that matches your compensation

That is going to go over well with current microsoft employees.

[+] kamaal|2 years ago|reply
Hmm, As some body who has watched the Visa thing from quite close quarters and lost, but saw others win. Let me tell you something. Getting a Green card is something your company can make it happen if they wanted to. Its just how much money they can spend to cook up documentation to justify your case.

A competent immigration attorney, can get you GC in a year if the company was ready to pay for it.

OTOH if you go in the normal EB1 lane it could take an eternity to get one, because now the pleb rules apply to you. Or worse if your bosses won't support you, you likely will not even complete the Visa time. So its really what the top people say will happen in these cases.

If you are important enough that you have to be there, for a company like Microsoft, these are some what like the cash they spend on food stocked in the floor pantry/kitchen areas.

They will just buy you a Green card.

[+] outside1234|2 years ago|reply
Microsoft will make it happen. Even if 350 people are in this situation that is nothing to the immigration arm of Microsoft.
[+] outside1234|2 years ago|reply
"The partnership remains strong" (As we hire all of your employees).

This is going to be fascinating to watch. You have to think all of the usual players are going to offer everyone at OpenAI crazy salaries to break from Microsoft, if for nothing else to disrupt them from taking over OpenAI for free and to sow chaos and "deal doubt" amongst the remaining. It is what I would do if I were Facebook or Google at least.

Meanwhile, at Microsoft, they had no raises this year because of "economic situations" or some such BS. So watching a bunch of folks get 2x raises doesn't sound like it is going to go down well. Not hard to imagine a lot of discontent with this from that angle as well.

[+] mckirk|2 years ago|reply
I don't really know why, but at this point whenever I read any new OpenAI news, Yakety Sax starts playing in my head.
[+] alexdoesstuff|2 years ago|reply
Presumably, this violates MSFT's investment agreement with OpenAI. Any reasonably competent counsel would add "no-poach" protection for a strategic investor investing in a startup, and this is as clear a case of poaching as there is.
[+] dist-epoch|2 years ago|reply
If the last three days didn't happen and Microsoft announced today that they are buying OpenAI there would have been massive uproar in the tech community against that, like when they bought GitHub.

But now they are seen as saviors of humanity against the evil people who don't want to commercialize AI for maximum profit.

Absolutely brilliant!

[+] iteratethis|2 years ago|reply
Imagine how that feels for the tens of thousands of MS employees laid off recently. "Had to be done", according to 2.7T$ company.

Followed by: "Hey guys, we don't know exactly what you do but do join us by the several hundreds and don't you worry about compensation, we pretty much have unlimited money to throw at this."

And then they say people are too cynical of tech.

[+] rickreynoldssf|2 years ago|reply
This seems to me like it's another nail in the coffin for Google. With Microsoft and its resources (essentially) fully in control of OpenAI tech without the non-profit chains, it can really turn everything upside down, kind of like what Google did to them in the 2000's. When was the last time you used Bard?
[+] crazygringo|2 years ago|reply
Few people are going to want to move unless most people are moving. So there is a coordination and timing issue here.

I really wonder if there's going to be a new letter from OpenAI employees about demanding the board reinstate Sam and Greg and then resign -- but this time with an actual deadline that the undersigned declare their mass resignation if not met. A genuine letter of conditional resignation. No more "may choose to resign" -- this time, "do resign if".

Then everybody knows to move to Microsoft literally the next day, all at once.

Given the holiday, it seems like midnight the end of this Sunday would be suitable.

[+] cma|2 years ago|reply
Wasn't OpenAI created as a counter to big tech AI labs?
[+] Vermyndax|2 years ago|reply
We'll see this again in discovery.
[+] nemo44x|2 years ago|reply
Salesforce CEO did the same yesterday. We know twitter can run with a skelton-crew but I’m not sure OpenAI can survive a mass exodus of top AI talent. This is a very interesting sort of collective action but non-adversarial. Management is clamoring for labor and making public offers to people they haven’t met to pay top dollar.
[+] gigel82|2 years ago|reply
I wonder how Microsoft employees feel like now, after being paid the worst of all FAANG, no merit increases, tens of thousands of layoffs over the last year, they'll now be matching the outrageous comp packages for incoming OpenAI hires...
[+] croes|2 years ago|reply
>advances our collective mission.

Microsoft's profit.

[+] seydor|2 years ago|reply
Msft has enough money to strongarm the law so they can somehow purchase openAi in the end
[+] udev4096|2 years ago|reply
Can you all please use nitter instead? It loads a lot faster and doesn't track you
[+] manishsharan|2 years ago|reply
Microsoft bagged the Best Black Friday Deal ever !

Re-Brand ChatGPT as Clippy Reloaded!

[+] gardenhedge|2 years ago|reply
Tidbit: Kevin Scott has a podcast ("Behind the Tech") and he had Mira Murati as a guest in July. The podcast interview itself isn't very interesting though.