I can’t imagine any board, for-profit or non-profit, tolerating one of its members criticizing its organization in public.
This is only evidence for how insane the practices of our civilization are, requiring that those who most have the need and the ability to scrutinise the power of a corporation do so the least. OpenAI was supposedly trying to swim against the current, but alas, it just became another example of the regular sort of company.
requiring that those who most have the need and the ability to scrutinise the power of a corporation do so the least.
I have no idea how you got that from what I said. The view of governance I am presenting is that the board should scrutinize the corporation, but behind closed doors, not out in public. Again, I’m not entirely confident that I agree with this view, but I do think it is normal for people involved in governance and therefor doesn’t indicate much about Altman or openAI one way or the other.
This is only evidence for how insane the practices of our civilization are, requiring that those who most have the need and the ability to scrutinise the power of a corporation do so the least. OpenAI was supposedly trying to swim against the current, but alas, it just became another example of the regular sort of company.
I have no idea how you got that from what I said. The view of governance I am presenting is that the board should scrutinize the corporation, but behind closed doors, not out in public. Again, I’m not entirely confident that I agree with this view, but I do think it is normal for people involved in governance and therefor doesn’t indicate much about Altman or openAI one way or the other.