What’s going on here? OpenAI is pushing to remove the “non” from nonprofit – and that change of attitude might’ve been a bridge too far for some of the startup’s founders. What does this mean? OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit company to ensure that AI benefits all of humanity. But apparently, the greater good and making money can coexist. The startup’s in talks to restructure as a “public benefit corporation”: a for-profit type of company that’s required to balance money-making with positive societal impact. And in the process, CEO Sam Altman will grab a 7% stake. Although, it seems that decision may have been controversial. OpenAI’s higher-ups bolted the day the news broke, including the firm’s highly influential chief technology officer. After something of a mass exodus over the last year, that means Altman’s now one of only two founders left out of the original 11. Why should I care? For markets: The chips are… Up. You can’t build multi-billion-dollar tech startups without the right chips – so much so that the order books of semiconductor companies can indicate how long the AI furor might last. And manufacturer Micron issued a surprisingly strong sales forecast this week, reassuring investors that firms are still shopping for anything AI. That sparked a significant rally in semiconductor stocks, with investors buying up shares of Micron, Samsung, SK Hynix, ASML, and Arm-owner SoftBank. The bigger picture: Never let them know your first move – unless you work in tech. OpenAI triggered rallies across tech stocks and existential crises across continents by introducing ChatGPT. But after setting the standard, the startup is now facing competition from rivals with serious sway. Amazon has tasked thousands of workers with creating cutting-edge AI products and making its Alexa even smarter. And Meta has finally doubled down on its metaverse vision, introducing augmented reality glasses that merge the digital world with the real. |