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OpenAI directors in talks with Sam Altman on rejoining board

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OpenAI’s directors are in talks with Sam Altman to allow him to re-join the board, four days after their decision to sack him plunged the generative artificial intelligence start-up into turmoil.

A deal to unify the company by bringing its former chief executive back alongside the remaining directors would be a compromise for both sides. More than 95 per cent of OpenAI employees signed a letter this week calling for the board to resign and reinstate Altman, while a trio of holdout directors have remained resolute in their view that his firing was justified.

The option, first reported by Bloomberg, is one of a number being discussed by the non-profit board which ultimately controls OpenAI, which spectacularly removed Altman and his co-founder Greg Brockman as directors last week, according to people with direct knowledge of the negotiations. After being stripped of his role as chair of the board, Brockman quit the company on Friday.

The departure of the two co-founders triggered a chaotic few days at OpenAI, which has become the most celebrated start-up in Silicon Valley since it launched its ChatGPT chatbot a year ago, kicking off a boom in generative AI.

Ilya Sutskever, a third co-founder, was one of the four directors who voted to oust Altman. Under growing pressure from his colleagues, Sutskever signed the letter calling on the board to reverse course and apologised on social media on Monday.

“I deeply regret my participation in the board’s actions,” he wrote on X: “I never intended to harm OpenAI. I love everything we’ve built together and I will do everything I can to reunite the company.” Sutskever did not say whether he would step down from the board.

That left three directors opposed to Altman’s return: Adam D’Angelo, chief executive of question-and-answer service Quora; technology entrepreneur Tasha McCauley; and Helen Toner from the Center for Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University.

The trio have come under growing pressure from employees and investors in OpenAI’s for-profit entity to explain their decision and to reverse course.

Before Altman was fired, questions had been raised internally around whether the pace of AI development at the company was safe and about potential conflicts with the 38-year old entrepreneur’s side projects, which range from cryptocurrency to nuclear fission. The board had also lost trust in Altman, according to a person with knowledge of their thinking.

But investors in the company say they have been left in the dark as to the specific reason for his firing.

Emmett Shear, the co-founder of video-streaming service Twitch who the board appointed as interim chief executive on Sunday, has also called for an independent investigation into how the decision was made to oust Altman and has pledged to reform the management of the company.

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