OpenAI, ChatGPT
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Ryan Beiermeister, who served as OpenAI’s vice president of product policy, was fired in January after a male colleague accused her of sex discrimination, the Wall Street Journal has reported.
OpenAI in January fired one of its top safety executives for sexual discrimination after she took a leave of absence. Employees familiar with the matter said Ryan Beiermeister had opposed the rollout of ChatGPT’s AI erotica feature leading up to the firing, according to new reporting from The Wall Street Journal.
OpenAI believes it will come out on top, despite its cash burn and spending commitments. Whether it's right is a trillion-dollar question.
The maker of ChatGPT hopes to triple its revenue in the coming year because it is planning to spend tens of billions of dollars. The clock is ticking.
3hon MSN
Agents, OpenAI, deepfakes, and the messy reality of the AI boom: A conversation with Oren Etzioni
Computer scientist and entrepreneur Oren Etzioni shares his unvarnished take on AI agents, the platform race, OpenAI, deepfakes, and what good AI leadership looks like, during a conversation at an Accenture-hosted event in Bellevue.
Ryan Beiermeister served as the vice president leading OpenAI’s product policy team.
"We've made less flashy headlines than some, and we've been focused on growing revenue and winning business," Anthropic's chief commercial officer told CNBC.
OpenAI has reportedly fired safety executive Ryan Beirmeister, whose title at the company was VP of product policy. According to the Wall Street Journal, which broke the story, Beirmeister was told her firing was related to sexual discrimination against a male colleague.
The War Department is partnering with OpenAI to integrate ChatGPT into a military AI platform, making advanced models available to 3 million personnel.
The company’s newest AI model triggered its own “high” risk classification—but critics say OpenAI didn’t follow through on the safety measures it promised.