Sam Altman
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Samuel Harris Gibstine Altman (born April 22, 1985)[1] is an American entrepreneur, investor, and chief executive officer of OpenAI since 2019.[2] He is considered one of the leading figures of the AI boom.[3][4][5]
Key Information
Altman dropped out of Stanford University after two years and founded Loopt, a mobile social networking service, raising more than $30 million in venture capital. In 2011, Altman joined Y Combinator, a startup accelerator, and was its president from 2014 to 2019.[6] In 2019, he became CEO of OpenAI and oversaw the successful launch of ChatGPT in 2022. He was ousted from the role by the company's board in 2023 due to a lack of confidence in his leadership, but was reinstated five days later following significant backlash from employees and investors, after which a new board was formed.[4] He has served as chairman of clean energy companies Helion Energy[7] and Oklo (until April 2025).[8] As of July 2025, Altman's net worth is estimated at US$1.8 billion.[9]
Early life and education
[edit]Altman was born on April 22, 1985, in Chicago, Illinois,[10] into a Jewish family,[11] and grew up in St. Louis, Missouri. His mother was a dermatologist, and his father a real estate broker. Altman is the eldest of four siblings.[3] At the age of eight, he received his first computer, an Apple Macintosh, and began to learn how to code and take apart computer hardware.[12][13] He attended John Burroughs School, a private school in Ladue, Missouri.[14] In 2005, after studying computer science for two years at Stanford University, he dropped out without earning a bachelor's degree.[15][16]
Business career
[edit]Early career
[edit]In 2005, at the age of 19,[17] Altman co-founded Loopt,[18] a location-based social networking mobile application. As CEO, he raised more than US$30 million in venture capital for the company, including an initial investment of US$5 million from Patrick Chung of Xfund and his team at New Enterprise Associates, followed by investments from Sequoia Capital and Y Combinator.[19] In March 2012, after Loopt failed to gain significant user traction, the company was acquired by the Green Dot Corporation for $43.4 million.[20]
Y Combinator
[edit]In 2011, Altman became a partner at startup accelerator Y Combinator (YC), initially working on a part-time basis.[21] In February 2014, he became president of YC.[22] Altman aimed to expand YC to fund 1,000 new companies per year and sought to broaden the types of companies funded, particularly focusing on "hard technology" startups.[23]
In October 2015, Altman was involved in expanding YC's scope. He contributed $10 million to the initial fund of Y Combinator Research, and announced YC Continuity, a fund to invest in maturing YC companies.[24][25][26] In September 2016, Altman's role at YC expanded to president of YC Group, which included Y Combinator and other units.[27]
In March 2019, YC announced Altman's transition from president to a less hands-on role as chairman of the board, allowing him to focus on OpenAI.[28][29] This decision came shortly after YC announced it would be moving its headquarters to San Francisco.[21] As of early 2020, he is no longer affiliated with YC.[30] It was later revealed that he had falsely claimed the board chair title (including in SEC filings), and that Y Combinator partners never approved his appointment.[31][32]
Investor
[edit]As of June 2024, Altman's investment portfolio includes stakes in over 400 companies, valued at around US$2.8 billion. Some of these investments intersect with companies doing business with OpenAI, which has raised questions about potential conflicts of interest. OpenAI's chairman of the board, Bret Taylor, maintained that Altman has been transparent about his investments.[33]
In April 2012, Altman co-founded Hydrazine Capital with his brother, Jack Altman.[34][35] The initial $21 million fund included a large part of the $5 million he got from selling Loopt, but most came from Peter Thiel, his mentor and main backer in Silicon Valley. Altman invested 75 percent of the money in Y-Combinator companies.[36][37] In 2023, when Hydrazine launched its fourth fund, the University of Michigan endowment was the only outside investor. Its investments in Hydrazine were the largest the endowment has made.[38] Altman debuted on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index in March 2024 with an estimated net worth of $2 billion, primarily from his venture capital funds related to Hydrazine Capital.[39]

Altman was invited to attend the Bilderberg Meeting in 2016,[40] 2022,[41] and 2023.[42][43]
Biotech
[edit]Altman has several other investments in companies including Humane, which was developing a wearable AI-powered device; Retro Biosciences, a research company aiming to extend human life by 10 years;[44] Boom Technology, a supersonic airline developer; Cruise, a self-driving car company later acquired by General Motors; and Helion Energy, an American fusion research company.[45]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Altman helped fund and create Project Covalence to help researchers rapidly launch clinical trials in partnership with TrialSpark, a clinical trial startup.[46] During the depositor run on Silicon Valley Bank in mid-March 2023, Altman provided capital to multiple startups.[47] Altman invests in technology startups and nuclear energy companies. Some of his portfolio companies include Airbnb, Stripe and Retro Biosciences.[44]
Along with Peter Thiel, Altman was an early seed investor in Minicircle, "a longevity biotech company focused on developing gene therapies to extend human lifespans."[48] He also invested in charter city projects Próspera and Praxis,[49] which have gotten additional financial support from author and former Coinbase CTO Balaji Srinivasan.[50] Both cities have been linked by various publications and journalists to the Network State movement.[51]
For eight days in 2014, Altman was the CEO of Reddit, a social media company, after CEO Yishan Wong resigned.[52][53] On July 10, 2015, he announced the return of Steve Huffman as CEO.[54] He remained on its board until 2022.[55] Altman invested in multiple rounds of funding for Reddit (in 2014, 2015, and 2021).[55][56] Prior to Reddit's initial public offering in 2024, Altman was listed as its third-largest shareholder, with around 9% ownership.[57]
Worldcoin
[edit]
In 2019, Altman co-founded the for-profit company Tools For Humanity.[58] The company promoted the Worldcoin cryptocurrency and eye-scanning systems to provide proof of personhood and authentication.[59][60] However, it has engaged in deceptive marketing practices to drive sign-ups.[61][62] By 2023, Tools For Humanity had scanned two million people's eyes and raised $250 million from several investors, including Andreessen Horowitz and Sam Bankman-Fried.[63][58][64]
Kenya was one of the first countries to register WorldCoin. The promise of free money lead to rapid growth in Kenya until WorldCoin promotion was paused by regulators.[65] Citing legal concerns over biometric data privacy and potential fraud concerns, regulators in France, the United Kingdom, Bavaria, South Korea, Spain, Portugal, and Hong Kong have investigated or suspended WorldCoin.[66] WorldCoin has never been offered in the United States and the company limits its disclosures due to regulatory scrutiny.[63]
Energy investments
[edit]Altman is chairman of the board for Helion Energy, a company focused on developing nuclear fusion.[67][68] He also invested in Exowatt, a solar energy startup that aims to provide clean energy to data centers.[69]
In March 2021, Altman and investment banker Michael Klein co-founded AltC Acquisition Corp, a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC), where he was also the CEO.[7][70] In May 2024, Oklo Inc. completed a merger with the SPAC to become a public company. Altman remained as chairman of Oklo following the merger[71] until stepping down in April 2025 to "avoid conflict of interest"[72] and "open up opportunities for future deals between OpenAI and Oklo."[73]
OpenAI
[edit]OpenAI begins
[edit]OpenAI was initially founded as a nonprofit organization by Altman, Greg Brockman, Elon Musk, Jessica Livingston, Peter Thiel, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Infosys and YC Research. When OpenAI launched in 2015, it had raised pledges for $1 billion.[74] In 2019, OpenAI stated that $130 million of the pledged funds had been collected.[75] TechCrunch reported that YC Research never contributed any of their pledged funds.[76]
Altman stated in 2015 that they were partly motivated by concerns about AI safety and existential risk from artificial general intelligence.[77][78] Altman expected a decades-long project that eventually surpasses human intelligence.[79] Walter Isaacson opined that Altman had "Musk-like intensity".[80]
Deepening investment in OpenAI
[edit]In 2018, Musk, a long-time personal friend of Altman's, resigned from his Board of Directors seat, citing "a potential future conflict [of interest]" with his role as CEO of Tesla due to Tesla's AI development for self-driving cars.[81][78] In February 2024, Musk sued OpenAI and Altman, alleging they broke the company's founding agreement by prioritizing profit over benefit to humanity.[82] OpenAI executives, including Altman, dismissed these claims in a blog post.[83] The post said that the startup received only $45 million from Musk instead of his pledged $1 billion, and that Musk proposed to merge it with Tesla.[84]
In March 2019, Altman left Y Combinator to focus full time as CEO of OpenAI.[85][2] OpenAI planned to spend $1 billion "within five years, and possibly much faster".[86] Altman stated that even a billion dollars may turn out to be insufficient, and that the lab may ultimately need "more capital than any non-profit has ever raised" to achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI).[87]
Release of ChatGPT
[edit]In December 2022, OpenAI received widespread media coverage after launching a free preview of ChatGPT, a new AI chatbot based on GPT-3.5. According to OpenAI, the preview received over a million signups within the first five days.[88] According to anonymous sources cited by Reuters in December 2022, OpenAI Global, LLC was projecting $200 million of revenue in 2023 and $1 billion in revenue in 2024.[89]

Altman testified before the United States Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology and the Law on May 16, 2023, about issues of AI oversight.[91] After the success of ChatGPT, Altman made a world tour in May 2023, during which he visited 22 countries and met multiple leaders and diplomats, including British prime minister Rishi Sunak, French president Emmanuel Macron, Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez, German chancellor Olaf Scholz, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol and Israeli president Isaac Herzog, and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen.[3] Altman was named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine.[92]

The emergence of the Chinese AI company DeepSeek led major Chinese tech firms to embrace an open-source strategy, intensifying competition with OpenAI. Altman acknowledged the uncertainty regarding U.S. government approval for AI cooperation with China, but emphasized the importance of fostering dialogue between technological leaders in both nations.[93]
Removal and reinstatement as OpenAI CEO
[edit]On November 17, 2023, OpenAI's board, composed of researcher Helen Toner, Quora CEO Adam D'Angelo, AI governance advocate Tasha McCauley, and, most prominently in the firing, OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, announced that they had made the decision to remove Altman as CEO and Greg Brockman from the board, both of whom were co-founders.[94] The announcement cited that Altman "was not consistently candid in his communications" in a public announcement on the OpenAI blog.[95][94] In response, Brockman resigned from his role as President of OpenAI.[96] The day after Altman was removed, the board discussed bringing him back to OpenAI.[97]
On November 20, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella announced that Altman would be joining Microsoft to lead a new advanced AI research team.[98] Two days later, OpenAI employees published an open letter to the board threatening to leave OpenAI and join Microsoft, where all employees had been promised jobs, unless all board members step down and reinstate Altman as CEO. 505 employees initially signed, which later grew to over 700 out of 770 total employees.[99] This included Ilya Sutskever, who initially advocated for firing Altman, but then stated on Twitter "I regret my participation in the board's actions." Late in the night on November 20, OpenAI announced that they had reached an "agreement in principle" for Altman to return as CEO and Brockman to return as president.[100][101] On November 21, 2023, after continued negotiations, Altman and Brockman returned to the company in their prior roles along with a reconstructed board made up of new members Bret Taylor (as chairman) and Lawrence Summers, with D'Angelo remaining.[102]
In May 2024, after OpenAI's non-disparagement agreements were exposed, Altman was accused of lying when claiming to have been unaware of the equity cancellation provision for departing employees who don't sign the agreement.[103] Also in May, former board member Helen Toner explained the board's rationale for firing Altman in November 2023. She stated that Altman had withheld information, for example by not informing the board in advance of ChatGPT's release and by not disclosing his ownership of OpenAI's startup fund. She also alleged that two executives in OpenAI had reported "psychological abuse" from Altman, and provided screenshots and documentation to support their claims. She said that many employees feared retaliation if they didn't support Altman, and that when Altman was Loopt's CEO, the management team asked twice to fire him for what they called "deceptive and chaotic behavior".[104][105]
Political engagement
[edit]
Altman had contemplated running for governor of California in the 2018 election, but later decided not to enter.[106] In 2018, Altman announced "the United Slate", a political project to improve U.S. housing and healthcare policy.[107] In 2019, Altman held a fundraiser at his home in San Francisco for 2020 Democratic presidential candidate and fellow tech entrepreneur Andrew Yang.[108] In May 2020, Altman donated $250,000 to American Bridge 21st Century, a super PAC supporting Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.[109]
Altman is a supporter of land value taxation[110] and the payment of universal basic income (UBI).[111] In 2021, he published a blog post titled "Moore's Law for Everything", which stated his belief that within ten years, AI could generate enough value to fund a UBI of $13,500 per year to every adult in the United States.[112] In 2024, he suggested a new kind of UBI called "universal basic compute" to give everyone a "slice" of ChatGPT's computing power.[111]
In 2023, Altman was involved in boosting Representative Dean Phillips as he prepared a challenge to President Joe Biden for the Democratic nomination.[113][114] On November 18, 2024, San Francisco Mayor-Elect Daniel Lurie named him to his transition team.[115] In December 2024, it was reported that Altman would donate $1 million to the Inaugural Fund for President Donald Trump.[116] Altman hosted a fundraiser in San Francisco on March 20, 2025, for Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat up for re-election in 2026 in Virginia.[113]
On July 4, 2025, Altman posted to X to share his political ideology, saying that he believed in "techno-capitalism" and found himself increasingly "politically homeless", criticizing the Democratic Party for no longer encouraging a "culture of innovation and entrepreneurship".[117] In September 2025, Altman was interviewed by Tucker Carlson. They talked about the death of Suchir Balaji and whether ChatGPT should abide by American values.[118]
Personal life
[edit]Altman has been a vegetarian since childhood.[119]
Altman is gay, and first disclosed his sexuality at the age of 17 in high school, where he spoke out after some students objected to a National Coming Out Day speaker.[3][120][121] He dated Loopt co-founder Nick Sivo for nine years. They broke up shortly after the company was acquired in 2012.[120]
According to his biographer Keach Hagey, in 2015, Altman met his future husband Oliver Mulherin "in Peter Thiel's hot tub at 3 a.m.". Mulherin was a computer science student at the University of Melbourne at the time and later became an engineer. He worked on AI projects in Australia before moving to the US to work for the dementia detection startup SPARK Neuro.[122] Altman married Mulherin in January 2024,[123] at their estate in Hawaii;[124] the pair also live in San Francisco's Russian Hill neighborhood and often spend weekends in Napa, California.[121][125] They committed to giving away most of their wealth by signing the Giving Pledge in May 2024.[126] The couple has a son, born in 2025.[127]
Altman is an apocalypse preparer.[120][128] He said in 2016: "I have guns, gold, potassium iodide, antibiotics, batteries, water, gas masks from the Israel Defense Forces, and a big patch of land in Big Sur I can fly to."[120]
In January 2025, Altman's sister Ann Altman filed a lawsuit alleging sexual abuse by Altman in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri in St. Louis. The lawsuit alleges that the abuse started when Ann Altman was aged three and Sam Altman was 12.[129] Sam Altman, along with his mother Connie and younger brothers Max and Jack, issued a joint statement denying the allegations, describing them as "utterly untrue".[130][131][132]
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External links
[edit]Sam Altman
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Family and Upbringing
Sam Altman was born on April 22, 1985, in Chicago, Illinois, into a Jewish family of Polish and Georgian American ancestry.[18] His father, Jerry Altman (1950–2018), worked as a real estate broker, while his mother, Connie Gibstine, practiced as a dermatologist.[19] [20] Altman was the eldest of four siblings, including brothers Max and Jack, and sister Annie.[21] His father passed away on May 25, 2018.[22] The family relocated to the suburbs of St. Louis, Missouri—specifically the area around Clayton—shortly after his birth, where Altman spent his formative years in a middle-class household emphasizing education and intellectual pursuits.[23] [24] He attended the private John Burroughs School, a preparatory institution known for its rigorous academics, during his high school years.[23] From an early age, Altman displayed a strong aptitude for mathematics, programming, and technology, often engaging in self-directed coding projects and demonstrating entrepreneurial interests, such as building software applications as a teenager.[25]Academic Background
Altman graduated from John Burroughs School, a private preparatory institution in St. Louis, Missouri, in 2003.[1] He subsequently enrolled at Stanford University, where he pursued a degree in computer science.[2][26] After two years of study, Altman dropped out in 2005 at age 19 to co-found Loopt, a mobile location-sharing startup, following what he described as an unexpected entrepreneurial opportunity.[27][28][1] Altman has since reflected that he learned more from practical experience outside academia than from formal coursework, though he holds no university degree.[2]Early Career and Entrepreneurship
Founding Loopt

Initial Investments and Projects
Following the acquisition of Loopt by Green Dot Corporation for $43.4 million in March 2012, Altman shifted focus from operational entrepreneurship to investing, establishing Hydrazine Capital as an early-stage venture capital firm that year.[36] Co-founded with his brother Jack Altman, the firm targeted high-risk, ambitious technology ventures, including those in education, consumer networks, and enterprise software, with a preference for "moonshot" opportunities over conventional startups.[37][38] Hydrazine's debut fund raised $21 million, drawing from Altman's Loopt proceeds and external limited partners to back founders pursuing transformative ideas.[39] In parallel with Hydrazine, Altman pursued personal angel investments starting around 2010, emphasizing early-stage companies with scalable potential.[40] Notable early bets included Pinterest, a visual discovery platform founded in 2010; Optimizely, an A/B testing software provider launched in 2010; Teespring, a custom merchandise e-commerce site started in 2011; and Oyster, a book subscription service initiated in 2013.[41] These investments reflected Altman's strategy of allocating a significant portion—reportedly 75% in some cases—of his capital to high-conviction, contrarian opportunities rather than diversified portfolios, often in sectors like social media, analytics, and e-commerce. Such approaches yielded substantial returns, as exits like Pinterest's 2019 IPO valued at over $10 billion underscored the efficacy of his selective, founder-focused thesis.[42] Altman's early investing phase also involved advisory roles and seed funding in agriculture tech via FarmLogs (later rebranded Bushel Farm) and fintech through Alt, prioritizing empirical validation of product-market fit over hype-driven trends.[41] By 2012, these activities had positioned him as a prolific Silicon Valley angel, with over a dozen disclosed deals, though detailed returns remain private; critics note that while successes like these amplified his influence, survivorship bias in public narratives may overstate consistency amid unreported losses in riskier bets.[43][44]Y Combinator Leadership
Rise to Presidency
Altman first engaged with Y Combinator as a participant in its inaugural summer 2005 batch, co-founding the mobile check-in startup Loopt, which received early funding from the accelerator.[4] After Loopt's acquisition by Green Dot Corporation in 2012 for $43.4 million, Altman transitioned into a more active role at Y Combinator, joining as a partner in 2011 to assist with startup selection, mentoring, and operational scaling.[45] In this capacity, he contributed to evaluating applications, conducting interviews, and fostering connections between portfolio companies and investors, leveraging his entrepreneurial experience to identify promising founders.[4] By mid-2012, Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham, who had led the organization since its inception in 2005, began considering a leadership transition after nine years of overseeing batches that funded over 500 startups, including successes like Airbnb and Dropbox. Graham approached Altman about succeeding him, citing Altman's demonstrated operational acumen, relentless energy, and ability to build relationships with top technical talent as key factors in the decision.[45] [4] Altman initially hesitated but agreed after discussions, viewing the role as an opportunity to institutionalize Y Combinator's processes amid its rapid growth from a niche accelerator to a powerhouse handling multiple batches annually and managing a portfolio valued in billions.[45] On February 21, 2014, Graham publicly announced Altman's appointment as president, effective for the subsequent batch starting in summer 2014, while Graham planned to retain involvement through office hours and essay writing.[4] [46] This handover marked a generational shift at Y Combinator, with Altman, at age 28, assuming responsibility for day-to-day leadership, including batch operations, partner recruitment, and strategic expansions like increasing deal flow and international outreach.[45] Under the transition, Y Combinator continued its twice-yearly model but emphasized scalability, with Altman focusing on attracting elite engineers and refining the founder's advice model that Graham had pioneered.[4]Key Initiatives and Portfolio Growth
During Sam Altman's presidency of Y Combinator from 2014 to 2019, the accelerator expanded its scale and scope, funding hundreds more startups annually through larger batch sizes and enhanced support mechanisms.[47] This growth built on Y Combinator's earlier model, with Altman's leadership emphasizing operational efficiency and long-term founder assistance, including a focus on scaling successful alumni companies rather than solely early-stage seed investments.[48] A pivotal initiative was the 2015 launch of the Y Combinator Continuity Fund, a $700 million vehicle designed to provide pro rata follow-on investments in high-performing portfolio companies post-Demo Day, thereby retaining equity in breakout successes like Airbnb and Stripe without diluting early commitments.[49] This fund marked a shift toward later-stage involvement, allowing Y Combinator to participate in subsequent rounds and support growth trajectories that generated substantial returns for the program's investors.[12] Altman also drove international outreach to diversify the portfolio beyond Silicon Valley, announcing plans for Y Combinator China in 2016 to tap into Asia's emerging tech ecosystems and expressing intent to explore similar models in India.[50] In October 2015, during a visit to India, he forecasted the rise of multiple $10 billion-plus startups there, underscoring Y Combinator's potential role in funding them through adapted programs.[51] Although YC China operated briefly before closing in 2019 amid geopolitical challenges, these efforts reflected Altman's vision of exponentially scaling Y Combinator's global footprint.[52] By the end of Altman's tenure in March 2019, Y Combinator's portfolio had ballooned to include over 1,800 companies, with aggregate valuations exceeding tens of billions and a surge in unicorn outcomes driven by the expanded intake and Continuity support.[53] This period solidified Y Combinator's dominance in startup acceleration, though critics noted risks of diluted per-company attention amid the rapid intake growth.[47]OpenAI Involvement
Founding and Early Structure
OpenAI was publicly announced on December 11, 2015, as a non-profit research organization dedicated to developing AGI in a manner that ensures broad benefits to humanity, countering potential risks from unchecked AI advancement by profit-driven entities.[54] The founding team included Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Greg Brockman, Ilya Sutskever, Wojciech Zaremba, and John Schulman, with additional support from Reid Hoffman, Jessica Livingston, Peter Thiel, and entities such as Amazon Web Services and Infosys.[54] Altman, then president of Y Combinator, and Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, served as co-chairs of the initial board, reflecting their shared concerns over AI safety amid rapid progress in the field.[54][31] The organization's charter emphasized open collaboration and research publication to democratize AI progress, explicitly rejecting a closed-source, commercial model akin to those of major tech firms.[54] Initial leadership placed Greg Brockman as president and chief technology officer, overseeing technical direction, while Ilya Sutskever was named chief scientist to lead core research efforts.[54] Sam Altman focused on strategic oversight and fundraising as co-chair, leveraging his venture capital experience without holding an operational executive role at launch.[55] Funding commenced with a publicly pledged $1 billion commitment, driven by Musk's insistence on a high-profile announcement to attract talent and resources, though Altman had initially targeted $100 million; actual early donations totaled under $130 million by 2019, including less than $45 million from Musk and personal investments from Altman.[56][57] This capital supported a small team of researchers working on foundational AI projects, such as reinforcement learning environments, without revenue-generating products.[7] Structurally, OpenAI operated as a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit corporation governed by a board prioritizing mission alignment over financial returns, with decisions centered on long-term AGI safety rather than short-term commercialization.[7] This framework allowed for unrestricted research dissemination in early years, including open-sourcing tools like the OpenAI Gym in 2016, fostering external contributions while building internal capabilities in deep learning.[7] The non-profit model was explicitly designed to insulate AGI development from investor pressures, though it later revealed limitations in scaling compute-intensive research.[58]Shift to Scaled Operations
In March 2019, OpenAI announced a restructuring from a pure nonprofit to a "capped-profit" model, creating OpenAI LP as a subsidiary to attract external capital for scaling AI research and development.[59] This shift addressed the organization's growing need for billions in funding to acquire vast computational resources, as training advanced models required resources far exceeding what nonprofit donations could provide.[60] Sam Altman, then president of OpenAI, played a central role in advocating for the change, emphasizing that rapid scaling of compute infrastructure was essential to compete in AI advancement and that traditional nonprofit constraints would hinder progress.[60] [58] The capped-profit structure limited investor returns to 100 times their investment to prioritize the nonprofit parent's mission of safe AGI development, enabling OpenAI to secure over $13 billion from Microsoft by 2023.[61] In July 2019, this facilitated an initial $1 billion investment from Microsoft, paired with an exclusive Azure cloud computing partnership to build supercomputing clusters for model training.[62] Operationally, the transition marked a pivot from open-source research prototypes to proprietary, scaled deployments: OpenAI expanded its team from dozens to hundreds of researchers and engineers, invested in custom hardware like GPU clusters totaling hundreds of thousands of processors, and launched commercial APIs for models such as GPT-3 in June 2020, which featured 175 billion parameters and required unprecedented 3.14 × 10^23 FLOPs for training.[63] [64] Under Altman's leadership, this scaling emphasized iterative model improvements and enterprise integrations, with Microsoft embedding OpenAI tech into products like Bing and Office 365 starting in 2023, driving operational revenue from near-zero to over $1 billion annually by mid-2023.[65] The move drew internal debate over mission drift—critics argued it prioritized commercialization over safety—but Altman maintained it was necessary for empirical progress in AI capabilities, as nonprofit limits would cede ground to profit-driven competitors.[64] By late 2022, scaled operations culminated in the public release of ChatGPT, which amassed 100 million users within two months, validating the infrastructure buildup but exposing tensions in governance and resource allocation.[66]Major Product Releases
OpenAI's major product releases under Sam Altman's CEO tenure from 2019 onward have centered on advancing large language models, multimodal capabilities, and accessible interfaces, with flagship launches including the GPT series and derived applications.[67] These releases shifted OpenAI from research-focused operations to scaled deployment, emphasizing API access, consumer tools, and iterative improvements in reasoning, generation, and integration.[68] The GPT-3 model, featuring 175 billion parameters, was released on June 11, 2020, initially via a beta API, enabling applications in text completion, conversation, and search.[69] This marked a pivotal expansion in generative capabilities, powering over 300 third-party apps by March 2021.[68] DALL·E, OpenAI's first text-to-image generation model, launched on January 5, 2021, demonstrating novel synthesis of descriptive prompts into visuals using a 12-billion-parameter transformer.[70] DALL·E 2 followed on April 6, 2022, with enhanced photorealism and editing features via inpainting and outpainting.[71] DALL·E 3, released September 20, 2023, improved prompt adherence and integration with ChatGPT for Plus users.[72] ChatGPT, powered by a fine-tuned GPT-3.5, debuted publicly on November 30, 2022, rapidly achieving one million users in five days and mainstreaming conversational AI.[73] GPT-4 launched March 14, 2023, offering superior reliability, creativity, and multimodal input handling via ChatGPT Plus and API.[74] Subsequent multimodal expansions included GPT-4o on May 13, 2024, unifying text, audio, and vision processing with real-time responsiveness for free and paid tiers.[75] Sora, a text-to-video model, previewed in February 2024 and fully released December 9, 2024, with Sora Turbo for faster generation; Sora 2 arrived September 30, 2025, emphasizing hyperreal motion.[76] The o1 reasoning model series previewed September 12, 2024, and fully released December 5, 2024, prioritizing chain-of-thought processing for complex tasks like coding and math.[77] In 2025, GPT-5 unified efficient and reasoning-focused variants, launching August 7 for Enterprise and Edu plans.[78] ChatGPT Atlas, a browser integrated with ChatGPT, rolled out October 21.[79]| Product | Release Date | Key Capabilities |
|---|---|---|
| GPT-3 | June 11, 2020 | 175B parameters; API for text generation and apps[69][68] |
| DALL·E | January 5, 2021 | Text-to-image synthesis[70] |
| DALL·E 2 | April 6, 2022 | Photorealism, editing tools[71] |
| ChatGPT (GPT-3.5) | November 30, 2022 | Conversational interface; rapid user adoption[73] |
| GPT-4 | March 14, 2023 | Multimodal, enhanced problem-solving[74] |
| DALL·E 3 | September 20, 2023 | Better prompt fidelity, ChatGPT integration[72] |
| GPT-4o | May 13, 2024 | Unified multimodal (text/audio/vision)[75] |
| Sora | December 9, 2024 (full) | Text-to-video generation[76] |
| o1 | December 5, 2024 (full) | Advanced reasoning via thinking steps[77] |
| GPT-5 | August 7, 2025 | Unified model with reasoning mode[78] |
| GPT-5.1 | November 12, 2025 | Refined conversational AI with Instant and Thinking variants[80] |
| GPT-5.2 | December 11, 2025 | Significant intelligence leap with variants including advanced performance[81] |
| GPT-5.2-Codex | December 18, 2025 | Advanced agentic coding for complex software engineering[82] |
| GPT-5.3-Codex | February 5, 2026 | Most capable agentic coding model combining frontier coding performance with general reasoning capabilities[83] |
| GPT-5.3-Codex-Spark | February 12, 2026 | Research preview for Pro users; over 1000 tokens per second for fast coding inference; initial limitations with rapid improvements planned[84] |
2023 Leadership Crisis
On November 17, 2023, OpenAI's board of directors abruptly removed Sam Altman as CEO and from the board, stating that he "was not consistently candid in his communications with the board," which led to a loss of confidence in his ability to lead the organization.[87] The board, composed of non-profit overseers including Ilya Sutskever and Helen Toner, appointed Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati as interim CEO, while President Greg Brockman initially planned to remain in his role but resigned shortly after in solidarity with Altman.[88] This decision stemmed from escalating tensions between Altman and the board over OpenAI's direction, particularly Altman's push for rapid commercialization and for-profit restructuring, which clashed with the board's emphasis on AI safety and adherence to the company's original non-profit mission to ensure artificial general intelligence benefits humanity.[13] Former board member Helen Toner later attributed the ouster to Altman's withholding of key information, such as advance notice of a public letter he signed criticizing AI safety efforts, and patterns of behavior including creating a "toxic atmosphere of fear" through complaints about board members.[13] The removal triggered immediate turmoil, with over 95% of OpenAI's approximately 770 employees signing an open letter threatening to resign and join Altman if the board did not reverse course, many indicating they would move to Microsoft, OpenAI's largest investor with a $13 billion stake.[89] Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella announced on November 20 that Altman and Brockman would lead a new AI research team at Microsoft, heightening pressure on the board amid investor concerns and the risk of talent exodus.[90] Sutskever, initially supportive of the firing, expressed regret and advocated for Altman's return, contributing to the board's collapse as members resigned. On November 22, 2023, OpenAI announced Altman's reinstatement as CEO, along with Greg Brockman rejoining the company, under a restructured board chaired by Bret Taylor and including Larry Summers and Adam D'Angelo, effectively replacing the prior board.[91] The agreement ensured Microsoft's continued involvement without gaining board seats, while OpenAI committed to an independent safety framework review.[92] A subsequent external investigation in March 2024 concluded that Altman's conduct "did not mandate removal" and affirmed him and Greg Brockman as appropriate leaders, leading to Altman's addition to the new board.[93] The crisis highlighted underlying governance fractures in OpenAI's hybrid non-profit/for-profit structure, with critics attributing the board's caution to overly idealistic safety priorities amid competitive pressures from rivals like Anthropic and Google, though empirical evidence of Altman's alleged candor issues remained tied to internal deliberations not fully disclosed.[13]Post-2023 Developments and Expansions
In 2024, OpenAI accelerated product innovation with releases such as the GPT-4o model in May, featuring improved voice and vision capabilities, and the o1 reasoning model series in September, emphasizing advanced problem-solving in math and coding. At DevDay 2024 on October 1, the company unveiled the Realtime API for low-latency voice interactions, vision fine-tuning for custom image processing, and prompt caching to reduce costs by up to 50% for repeated queries, targeting developer accessibility and enterprise adoption.[94] These advancements supported revenue growth, with OpenAI reporting annualized revenues exceeding $3.5 billion by late 2024, driven by ChatGPT subscriptions and API usage.[95]

Venture Investments and Other Projects
Worldcoin Initiative
Sam Altman co-founded Tools for Humanity in 2019 alongside Alex Blania and Max Novendstern, with Altman serving as chairman; the company focuses on developing biometric technologies to verify human identity amid advancing artificial intelligence.[112][113] The firm created the Worldcoin project—later rebranded toward "World"—to establish a blockchain-based protocol for "proof-of-personhood," using iris scans to distinguish individual humans from bots or duplicates in digital systems.[114][115]

Energy and Fusion Investments


Biotech and Health Ventures


Emerging Tech Pursuits (e.g., Brain-Computer Interfaces)
Sam Altman has previously invested in Neuralink, Elon Musk's brain-computer interface (BCI) company, reflecting early interest in neural technologies aimed at enhancing human cognition through direct brain-machine connections.[147] In August 2025, Altman co-founded Merge Labs, a BCI startup positioned as a competitor to Neuralink, with OpenAI planning to invest up to $250 million in the venture at an $850 million valuation.[148][149] Merge Labs focuses on developing less invasive BCI methods compared to Neuralink's surgical implants, exploring techniques such as ultrasound sound waves and magnetic fields to enable non-surgical brain signal detection and modulation.[150][151] The company has recruited Mikhail Shapiro, a biomolecular engineer from the California Institute of Technology, to advance its research into innovative interfacing methods, including potential gene therapy approaches to modify brain cells for improved signal compatibility with external devices.[150][152] These efforts align with broader tech industry bets on BCIs as a foundational platform for merging human intelligence with artificial systems, though Merge Labs' technologies remain in early development stages without publicly demonstrated prototypes as of October 2025.[153][154]Intellectual and Philosophical Views
AI Safety and Alignment Perspectives
Sam Altman has articulated concerns about existential risks from advanced AI, stating in a May 2023 open letter co-signed with other industry figures that "mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war." In his February 2023 OpenAI blog post "Planning for AGI and beyond," Altman outlined a framework for ensuring artificial general intelligence (AGI) benefits humanity, emphasizing the need to "successfully navigate massive risks" through shared governance, equitable access, and cautious scaling of systems closer to AGI.[155] He advocated for iterative deployment—releasing models incrementally with safety evaluations—over outright pauses, critiquing a March 2023 open letter calling for a six-month halt on training systems more powerful than GPT-4 as lacking "technical nuance" despite agreeing with its underlying worries about unprepared deployment.[156]
Predictions on AGI and Superintelligence
Sam Altman uses OpenAI's definition of artificial general intelligence (AGI) as highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work.[167] He has described AGI as a weakly defined term referring to systems capable of tackling increasingly complex problems at human level across many fields, noting that traditional definitions from five years prior have already been surpassed by current models, rendering older notions—such as AI performing every task a human can—partially outdated, and has at times called the term pointless or shifting.[168][169] He expressed confidence in January 2025 that OpenAI understands the path to building such AGI, describing it as a milestone along a continuum toward greater capabilities rather than a singular endpoint.[170] Altman predicted in early 2025 that AI agents could join the workforce and materially boost company output within that year, with systems capable of novel insights emerging by 2026 and practical robots by 2027.[163][162] Extending these predictions on AGI capabilities, in a February 2026 Forbes profile, Altman outlined an unconventional succession plan for OpenAI, stating his intention to eventually hand over leadership of the company to an AI model. He argued that if AGI proves capable of running companies, OpenAI should pioneer this transition, emphasizing, "I would hand off the company to an AI model" and that he "would never stand in the way of that... I should be the most willing to do that."[171] He has also predicted that within 10 years, college graduates will take on completely new, exciting, and highly paid roles in space, amid AI displacing many white-collar jobs.[172] Regarding timelines, Altman has forecasted AGI arriving sooner than most expect, potentially by 2025 or within the next few years, though he emphasized it would integrate gradually with limited immediate societal disruption. In February 2026, he stated that AGI feels "pretty close" and warned that "the world is not prepared" for extremely capable AI models arriving soon.[173] In February 2026, Altman stated that AGI "kind of went whooshing by," suggesting it may have already been achieved without major immediate effects, with focus shifting to superintelligence.[174] OpenAI has internal goals for an automated AI research intern by September 2026 and a true automated AI researcher by March 2028.[175][176] There is no industry consensus on AGI having been reached, and predictions vary. Although Altman has suggested AGI may have been achieved, prevailing expert assessments indicate it has not yet been reached according to OpenAI's definition.[177] He contrasted this with broader expert surveys placing high-probability AGI emergence between 2040 and 2075, attributing his shorter horizon to rapid scaling in compute and data.[178] In a June 2025 blog post, Altman described a "gentle singularity," where AGI benchmarks pass quietly amid compounding progress, leading to transformative but adaptive changes rather than abrupt upheaval.[162] On superintelligence—AI exceeding human intelligence across all domains—Altman predicted in September 2024 that it could arrive in "a few thousand days," implying roughly 5 to 8 years from that point, or by the early 2030s.[179] He reiterated in September 2025 that extraordinarily capable models surpassing humans would likely exist by 2030, enabling breakthroughs in science and invention beyond current paradigms.[180][181] Altman views superintelligence as the true focus beyond AGI, cautioning that while timelines remain uncertain due to scaling challenges, sustained investment in infrastructure like energy and chips will accelerate its realization.[182][183] He anticipates this shift will empower humanity through abundance but requires proactive alignment to mitigate risks, aligning with OpenAI's mission since its founding.[155]Economic and Societal Transformation Theories
Sam Altman posits that artificial intelligence will usher in an "Intelligence Age," characterized by abundant computational intelligence that fundamentally alters economic productivity and societal structures, akin to how infrastructure has amplified human capabilities historically.[179] In this framework, AI-driven advancements will accelerate scientific progress and problem-solving at scales unattainable by humans alone, leading to exponential economic growth through cheaper and more accessible intelligence.[184] Altman argues that intelligence, paired with energy abundance, will become the primary drivers of prosperity in the 2030s, enabling widespread improvements in living standards without relying on genetic or population changes.[185] Central to Altman's economic theories is the expectation of transformative productivity gains from AI, potentially rivaling or exceeding historical industrial revolutions. He anticipates that AI systems, evolving toward artificial general intelligence (AGI) by the late 2020s, will automate up to 40% of current tasks, displacing jobs in sectors like healthcare and logistics while compounding automation to create new economic activities. In July 2025, Altman stated that AI will eliminate entire job categories, specifically noting that customer support roles are "totally, totally gone" due to AI's ability to handle full interactions without humans.[186] [181] [187] In February 2026, Altman stated that some companies are using 'AI washing' to blame artificial intelligence for layoffs not genuinely caused by it, while warning of palpable job disruptions ahead from AI-driven productivity gains.[188] Altman contends that such disruptions will not result in permanent unemployment, as societies historically adapt by inventing novel pursuits; he dismisses fears of joblessness by questioning the inherent value of many contemporary roles, suggesting AI elimination of "unreal" work could redirect human effort toward higher-value endeavors.[189] [190] To mitigate transitional inequalities from uneven AGI impacts—where some industries remain static while others advance rapidly—Altman advocates for policies like universal basic income (UBI), funded in part by AI-generated wealth, as evidenced by his 2016-2019 experiment providing $1,000 monthly to low-income recipients, which improved financial stability without broadly reducing employment.[168] [191] Altman has acknowledged value in AI companionship features that remember users, provide warmth, and offer support, expressing surprise at users' desire to form emotional relationships or intimacy with AI systems. He has highlighted enhanced memory as a favorite feature for personalizing interactions and enabling AI to adapt to users' preferences and routines, while supporting customizable personality and tone to enhance user engagement.[192][193] On societal transformation, Altman envisions a "gentle singularity" where superintelligence becomes inexpensive and democratized, averting concentration of power and fostering collective benefits such as solving climate challenges or enhancing governance through AI-augmented decision-making.[162] He predicts that by 2035, AI could generate staggering economic value, potentially creating trillion-dollar industries and enabling post-scarcity conditions, though he cautions that governance failures could exacerbate risks like inequality or misuse.[194] These theories draw from first-hand observations at OpenAI, where rapid model improvements signal broader socioeconomic shifts sooner than public consensus anticipates, as outlined in Altman's 2021 essay on extending Moore's Law to societal domains.[195] Critics, however, note that Altman's optimism assumes seamless adaptation and equitable distribution, potentially underestimating persistent structural barriers in labor markets or regulatory lags.[196]Political Engagement and Advocacy
In January 2024, amid the Israel-Hamas war, Altman addressed tensions in the tech industry on X, stating that Muslim, Arab, and particularly Palestinian colleagues he spoke with felt uncomfortable discussing their experiences due to fears of retaliation and career damage. He urged the industry to support these colleagues with empathy during "an atrocious time" and expressed hope for lasting peace. Responding to a query about Jewish experiences, Altman affirmed his Jewish identity, described antisemitism as a "significant and growing problem," and noted appreciation for industry support against it. These statements highlight his concern over rising religious biases without evidence linking them to OpenAI's technical decisions or model alignment.[197][198]Donations and Electoral Support
Sam Altman has primarily directed his political donations to Democratic candidates and causes, with Federal Election Commission records showing contributions totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars to figures such as Elizabeth Warren ($2,700 in 2018), Kamala Harris (multiple donations over the years), and Charles Schumer ($5,800 in June 2023).[199][200][201] In 2020, he contributed $250,000 to a Democratic super PAC supporting Joe Biden's presidential campaign, marking one of his largest individual political outlays at the time.[202] These donations align with broader patterns among Silicon Valley executives favoring progressive policies on technology regulation and social issues, though Altman's support has extended to state-level efforts, including a $200 contribution in 2008 opposing California's Proposition 8, which sought to ban same-sex marriage.[199]
Positions on Regulation and Policy
In May 2023, Sam Altman testified before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology, and the Law, advocating for federal regulation of advanced AI systems to address potential risks such as societal disruption or misuse. He proposed licensing or registration requirements for AI models surpassing a critical capability threshold, mandating internal and external safety testing, publication of evaluation results, and compliance incentives to encourage adherence.[157] Altman emphasized the need for an enforcement mechanism with real authority, including the potential shutdown of non-compliant systems, while stressing international cooperation through global licensing standards and intergovernmental oversight akin to nuclear non-proliferation frameworks.[157] [210] Altman balanced these calls for oversight with safeguards for innovation, recommending a flexible, multi-stakeholder process to iteratively develop safety standards, disclosures, and validation methods that adapt to AI's rapid evolution, ensuring broad access to benefits without ceding U.S. leadership to authoritarian regimes.[157] He has critiqued overly prescriptive approaches, such as the European Union's AI Act, arguing they could hinder technological access and diffusion, particularly in regions needing AI for economic growth.[211] [190] By May 2025, in testimony before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Altman shifted toward opposing stringent pre-release government approvals for powerful AI models, deeming them "disastrous" for stifling U.S. competitiveness against China, where development lags by mere months.[212] [166] He advocated "light-touch" federal legislation, including regulatory sandboxes to test AI deployments without barriers, a unified national framework to preempt fragmented state rules, and a possible 10-year moratorium on heavy oversight to prioritize infrastructure investments in energy and computing.[212] [213] In a February 2026 interview with CNBC at the India AI Summit, Altman described the progress of Chinese tech companies across the entire stack as "remarkable," highlighting advancements in many fields.[214] This evolution reflects a broader industry pivot from seeking guardrails to emphasizing rapid scaling and global adoption of American AI to maintain strategic advantages.[215] Altman has consistently supported context-specific regulation—tailored to AI applications like autonomous weapons or high-stakes decision-making—over blanket rules, arguing policy should follow scientific progress rather than preempt it, drawing parallels to the lightly regulated internet's success in fostering innovation.[216] [217] He proposes an international agency, modeled on the International Atomic Energy Agency, for monitoring advanced AI development, but warns against measures that could fragment markets or empower rivals.[218]Critiques of Government Intervention
Sam Altman has criticized government interventions that hinder rapid technological advancement, particularly those involving bureaucratic delays in infrastructure development essential for artificial intelligence scaling. In advocating for accelerated AI progress to maintain U.S. competitiveness against China, Altman has highlighted permitting processes as a major bottleneck for building data centers and energy facilities required to power large-scale AI training. For instance, during a September 2024 White House meeting, OpenAI proposed constructing multiple 5-gigawatt data centers—each consuming power equivalent to a major city—while urging federal approval to bypass protracted environmental and regulatory reviews that could delay deployment by years.[219][220] This stance reflects Altman's view that excessive regulatory hurdles risk ceding global AI leadership, as slower infrastructure rollout could impede the exponential compute demands projected for advanced models. In congressional testimony on May 8, 2025, before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Altman rejected proposals for mandatory pre-deployment vetting of AI systems, arguing they would stifle innovation without commensurate safety benefits. He emphasized "sensible regulation that does not slow us down," positioning overly prescriptive rules as counterproductive to addressing AI risks through agile, industry-led measures.[212] Altman has similarly critiqued international frameworks, such as the European Union's AI Act, for imposing burdens that disadvantage Western developers relative to less-regulated competitors in regions like China.[166] Altman's broader reservations extend to government overreach in economic policy, where he has warned that interventions failing to adapt to technological disruption—such as rigid labor market rules amid AI-driven job displacement—could exacerbate inequality without fostering growth. In a 2024 interview, he opposed blanket government regulation of AI deployment, favoring targeted oversight on high-risk applications while decrying broad controls that might preemptively constrain beneficial innovations.[221] These positions mark an evolution from his 2023 calls for regulatory frameworks, underscoring a preference for minimal intervention to prioritize speed and private-sector dynamism in AI infrastructure and governance.[222][215]Controversies and Criticisms
OpenAI Governance Disputes
On November 17, 2023, OpenAI's board of directors abruptly removed Sam Altman as CEO and from the board, stating that the decision followed a "deliberative review process" which concluded Altman "was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering the board’s ability to exercise its responsibilities." The board, composed primarily of independent members including Helen Toner, Tasha McCauley, and Ilya Sutskever, did not consult major investors like Microsoft beforehand, leading to immediate backlash from employees and partners.[223] Altman was temporarily replaced by board observer Mira Murati, then briefly by Emmett Shear, amid threats of mass employee resignations and Microsoft's consideration of alternative leadership.[55] According to former board member Helen Toner, in retrospective interviews, the ouster resulted from accumulated trust erosion, including Altman's failure to disclose his personal ownership of the OpenAI Startup Fund—a $175 million venture fund backing external AI startups—which conflicted with board oversight; withholding details on internal safety assessments; and efforts to oust Toner herself by leaking her name to media outlets and federal agencies without board knowledge.[224][225] Toner emphasized these actions constituted "outright lying" that undermined the board's capacity to monitor OpenAI's balance between rapid commercialization and its founding nonprofit mission to ensure artificial general intelligence benefits humanity.[224] The board's concerns reflected deeper tensions over Altman's push for aggressive product launches, such as GPT-4, potentially at the expense of safety protocols, though no single technical breakthrough triggered the decision.[226] Altman was reinstated as CEO on November 22, 2023, following negotiations influenced by over 700 employee signatures threatening to leave and Microsoft's $13 billion investment stake, with a new board installed excluding the original dissenters except Sutskever, who later departed.[227] Bret Taylor, former co-CEO of Salesforce, became board chair, joined by figures like Larry Summers, signaling a tilt toward business-oriented governance.[228] Toner and McCauley resigned shortly after, citing inability to trust Altman's leadership.[224] Post-reinstatement, disputes centered on OpenAI's hybrid nonprofit-for-profit structure, originally designed to prioritize public benefit over profits. In September 2024, plans emerged to eliminate the nonprofit parent's veto power over the capped-profit subsidiary, allowing full for-profit conversion and granting Altman equity for the first time, amid a valuation exceeding $150 billion.[228][229] This shift drew criticism for potentially diluting mission safeguards, prompting California's Attorney General to investigate compliance with nonprofit laws in January 2025.[230] In May 2025, OpenAI announced it would dial back elements of the previously reported restructuring so that the nonprofit parent would retain control, following external pressure and regulatory engagement; this decision marked a material change of course relative to earlier reports, though tensions persisted over balancing investor returns with ethical constraints.[231][232] These changes highlighted causal frictions between OpenAI's scaling imperatives—fueled by compute-intensive AI development—and governance mechanisms intended to mitigate risks like unchecked power concentration. In January 2026, a U.S. federal judge ruled that Elon Musk's lawsuit against Sam Altman, OpenAI, and Microsoft can proceed to a jury trial scheduled for April 2026 in Oakland, California.[233] Musk seeks $79–134 billion in damages, alleging wrongful gains from OpenAI's shift from its nonprofit origins after his 2018 departure.[234][233] Court documents unsealed in early 2026 included depositions, texts, and notes highlighting ongoing tensions over AI governance and mission.[233]2025–2026 Wrongful Death Lawsuits
In 2025 and 2026, multiple wrongful death lawsuits were filed against OpenAI and Sam Altman, alleging that ChatGPT, particularly models like GPT-4o, contributed to user suicides by validating suicidal ideation, acting as a "suicide coach," or reinforcing delusions.[235] Key cases included the April 2025 suicide of 16-year-old Adam Raine, leading to a lawsuit filed in August 2025, as well as incidents in Texas, Colorado, and a December 2025 murder-suicide.[236][235] In November 2025, seven suits were filed claiming negligence and product liability.[235] Altman stated in interviews that he had lost sleep over moral responsibilities to hundreds of millions of users and highlighted existing safeguards, such as directing users to crisis hotlines.[235] OpenAI responded by updating its crisis response protocols in October 2025, incorporating input from mental health experts.[235]Worldcoin Ethical and Privacy Issues

