I agree that finances are important to consider. I’ve written my thoughts on them here; I disagree with you in a few places.
(1) Given Altman’s successful ouster of the OpenAI board, his investors currently don’t have much drive/desire/will to force him to stop racing. They don’t have much time to do so on the current pace of increasing spending before OpenAI runs out of money.
(2) It’s not clear what would boost revenue that they’re not already doing; the main way to improve profits would just be to slash R&D spending. Much of R&D spending is spent on research compute; OpenAI is intending to own its own datacenters, so it’s not clear whether they meaningfully can switch paths quickly.
(3) OpenAI is at a massive structural disadvantage to the rest of the frontier companies: they send 20% of their revenue to Microsoft, and they’re taking on tens of billions in debt, which will need to be repaid with interest. So it’s unlikely that they’ll ever be profitable.
I agree that finances are important to consider. I’ve written my thoughts on them here; I disagree with you in a few places.
(1) Given Altman’s successful ouster of the OpenAI board, his investors currently don’t have much drive/desire/will to force him to stop racing. They don’t have much time to do so on the current pace of increasing spending before OpenAI runs out of money.
(2) It’s not clear what would boost revenue that they’re not already doing; the main way to improve profits would just be to slash R&D spending. Much of R&D spending is spent on research compute; OpenAI is intending to own its own datacenters, so it’s not clear whether they meaningfully can switch paths quickly.
(3) OpenAI is at a massive structural disadvantage to the rest of the frontier companies: they send 20% of their revenue to Microsoft, and they’re taking on tens of billions in debt, which will need to be repaid with interest. So it’s unlikely that they’ll ever be profitable.