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OpenAI still has a governance problem

Remaining under the control of a non-profit board does not negate the risks of increasingly autonomous AI models
Sam Altman, OpenAI’s chief executive, and Elon Musk, one of the co-founders, who is pursuing legal action against the company for straying from its original purpose

It can be hard to train a chatbot. Last month, OpenAI rolled back an update to ChatGPT because its “default personality” was too sycophantic. (Maybe the company’s training data was taken from transcripts of US President Donald Trump’s cabinet meetings . . .)

The artificial intelligence company had wanted to make its chatbot more intuitive but its responses to users’ enquiries skewed towards being overly supportive and disingenuous. “Sycophantic interactions can be uncomfortable, unsettling, and cause distress. We fell short and are working on getting it right,” the company said in a blog post.

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