Manage episode 518919937 series 1531348
Last December, the OpenAI business put forward a plan to completely sideline its nonprofit board. But two state attorneys general have now blocked that effort and kept that board very much alive and kicking.
The for-profit’s trouble was that the entire operation was founded on the premise of — and legally pledged to — the purpose of ensuring that “artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.” So to get its restructure past regulators, the business entity has had to agree to 20 serious requirements designed to ensure it continues to serve that goal.
Attorney Tyler Whitmer, as part of his work with Legal Advocates for Safe Science and Technology, has been a vocal critic of OpenAI’s original restructure plan. In today’s conversation, he lays out all the changes and whether they will ultimately matter.
Full transcript, video, and links to learn more: https://80k.info/tw2
After months of public pressure and scrutiny from the attorneys general (AGs) of California and Delaware, the December proposal itself was sidelined — and what replaced it is far more complex and goes a fair way towards protecting the original mission:
- The nonprofit’s charitable purpose — “ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity” — now legally controls all safety and security decisions at the company. The four people appointed to the new Safety and Security Committee can block model releases worth tens of billions.
- The AGs retain ongoing oversight, meeting quarterly with staff and requiring advance notice of any changes that might undermine their authority.
- OpenAI’s original charter, including the remarkable “stop and assist” commitment, remains binding.
But significant concessions were made. The nonprofit lost exclusive control of AGI once developed — Microsoft can commercialise it through 2032. And transforming from complete control to this hybrid model represents, as Tyler puts it, “a bad deal compared to what OpenAI should have been.”
The real question now: will the Safety and Security Committee use its powers? It currently has four part-time volunteer members and no permanent staff, yet they’re expected to oversee a company racing to build AGI while managing commercial pressures in the hundreds of billions.
Tyler calls on OpenAI to prove they’re serious about following the agreement:
- Hire management for the SSC.
- Add more independent directors with AI safety expertise.
- Maximise transparency about mission compliance.
"There’s a real opportunity for this to go well. A lot … depends on the boards, so I really hope that they … step into this role … and do a great job. … I will hope for the best and prepare for the worst, and stay vigilant throughout."
Chapters:
- We’re hiring (00:00:00)
- Cold open (00:00:40)
- Tyler Whitmer is back to explain the latest OpenAI developments (00:01:46)
- The original radical plan (00:02:39)
- What the AGs forced on the for-profit (00:05:47)
- Scrappy resistance probably worked (00:37:24)
- The Safety and Security Committee has teeth — will it use them? (00:41:48)
- Overall, is this a good deal or a bad deal? (00:52:06)
- The nonprofit and PBC boards are almost the same. Is that good or bad or what? (01:13:29)
- Board members’ “independence” (01:19:40)
- Could the deal still be challenged? (01:25:32)
- Will the deal satisfy OpenAI investors? (01:31:41)
- The SSC and philanthropy need serious staff (01:33:13)
- Outside advocacy on this issue, and the impact of LASST (01:38:09)
- What to track to tell if it's working out (01:44:28)
This episode was recorded on November 4, 2025.
Video editing: Milo McGuire, Dominic Armstrong, and Simon Monsour
Audio engineering: Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Music: CORBIT
Coordination, transcriptions, and web: Katy Moore
314 episodes