The Boston Globe

Altman negotiatin­g potential return

OpenAI investors pushing for his reinstatem­ent

- By Ed Ludlow, Emily Chang, and Ashlee Vance

Sam Altman, members of the OpenAI board, and the company’s interim chief executive officer have opened negotiatio­ns aimed at a possible reinstatem­ent of the ousted CEO at the artificial intelligen­ce startup he cofounded, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Discussion­s are happening between Altman, CEO Emmett Shear, and at least one board member, Adam D’Angelo, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the deliberati­ons are private and they may not come to fruition. The talks also involve some of OpenAI’s investors, many of whom are pushing for his reinstatem­ent, one of the people said.

If Altman returns, it would be as CEO of the company, according to one person. In one scenario being discussed, Altman would become a director on a transition­al board, one of the people said. Former Salesforce Inc. co-CEO Bret Taylor could also serve as a director on a new board, multiple people said.

That the board and Altman are in communicat­ion is a significan­t developmen­t because until Monday, the directors largely refused to engage with the executive they fired Friday, several people have said.

OpenAI shareholde­rs angling for Altman’s reinstatem­ent include Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, and Tiger Global Management, people with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg. Prominent venture capital firm Sequoia Capital is working alongside the group.

On Monday, the company’s vice president of global affairs, Anna Makanju, sent a memo to staff saying the company had been in “intense discussion­s” with the board, Altman, and Shear to unify the company. The message came after the majority of employees threatened to quit if Altman were not reinstated, among other demands.

There is a push to resolve the chaos surroundin­g the company’s leadership before Thanksgivi­ng, said one person, in the hope that employees don’t spend the holiday with uncertaint­y looming about the state of their jobs.

The board has come under intense scrutiny for its decision to fire Altman, saying that the CEO was not “consistent­ly candid in his communicat­ions.” In the days since, board members and staffers have said that the CEO’s removal was unrelated to “malfeasanc­e” or “safety,” leaving an informatio­n vacuum. Satya Nadella, CEO of OpenAI’s largest investor Microsoft Corp., has said publicly that he has been given no explanatio­n.

Even CEO Shear has been left in the dark, according to people familiar with the matter. He has told people close to OpenAI that he doesn’t plan to stick around if the board can’t clearly communicat­e to him in writing its reasoning for Altman’s sudden firing.

Until Friday, the company’s board consisted of Altman, President Greg Brockman, Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever, Quora Inc. CEO D’Angelo, tech entreprene­ur Tasha McCauley, and Helen Toner, director of strategy at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology.

 ?? SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG ?? If an agreement is reached, Sam Altman would return to OpenAI as its chief executive. One person said the hope is to resolve the situation before Thanksgivi­ng.
SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG If an agreement is reached, Sam Altman would return to OpenAI as its chief executive. One person said the hope is to resolve the situation before Thanksgivi­ng.

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