In July last year, OpenAI announced the formation of a new research team that would prepare for the advent of supersmart artificial intelligence capable of outwitting and overpowering its creators. Ilya Sutskever, OpenAIâs chief scientist and one of the companyâs cofounders, was named as the colead of this new team. OpenAI said the team would receive 20 percent of its computing power.
Now OpenAIâs âsuperalignment teamâ is no more, the company confirms. That comes after the departures of several researchers involved, Tuesdayâs news that Sutskever was leaving the company, and the resignation of the teamâs other colead. The groupâs work will be absorbed into OpenAIâs other research efforts.
Sutskeverâs departure made headlines because although heâd helped CEO Sam Altman start OpenAI in 2015 and set the direction of the research that led to ChatGPT, he was also one of the four board members who fired Altman in November. Altman was restored as CEO five chaotic days later after a mass revolt by OpenAI staff and the brokering of a deal in which Sutskever and two other company directors left the board.
Hours after Sutskeverâs departure was announced on Tuesday, Jan Leike, the former DeepMind researcher who was the superalignment teamâs other colead, posted on X that he had resigned.
Neither Sutskever nor Leike responded to requests for comment, and they have not publicly commented on why they left OpenAI. Sutskever did offer support for OpenAIâs current path in a post on X. âThe companyâs trajectory has been nothing short of miraculous, and Iâm confident that OpenAI will build AGI that is both safe and beneficialâ under its current leadership, he wrote.
The dissolution of OpenAIâs superalignment team adds to recent evidence of a shakeout inside the company in the wake of last Novemberâs governance crisis. Two researchers on the team, Leopold Aschenbrenner and Pavel Izmailov, were dismissed for leaking company secrets, The Information reported last month. Another member of the team, William Saunders, left OpenAI in February, according to an internet forum post in his name.
Two more OpenAI researchers working on AI policy and governance also appear to have left the company recently. Cullen O’Keefe left his role as research lead on policy frontiers in April, according to LinkedIn. Daniel Kokotajlo, an OpenAI researcher who has coauthored several papers on the dangers of more capable AI models, âquit OpenAI due to losing confidence that it would behave responsibly around the time of AGI,â according to a posting on an internet forum in his name. None of the researchers who have apparently left responded to requests for comment.
OpenAI declined to comment on the departures of Sutskever or other members of the superalignment team, or the future of its work on long-term AI risks. Research on the risks associated with more powerful models will now be led by John Schulman, who coleads the team responsible for fine-tuning AI models after training.
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