Sam Altman wants to maintain control of OpenAI and its popular A.I. chatbot technology and therefore wont take the company public anytime soon because it would limit his freedom to make decisions, Bloomberg reported.

When we develop superintelligence, were likely to make some decisions that public market investors would view very strangely, Altman said at an event in Abu Dhabi. 

Altman explained that he doesnt have equity in privately-owned OpenAI because he wants to be non-conflicted. The Abu Dhabi event is the latest stop in Altmans world tour across Asia, Europe, and the Middle East to discuss reducing A.I.s potential harm to society and regulating the technology. 

The comments come three weeks after Altman spoke to the Senates A.I. oversight subcommittee about the dangers of A.I., during which he said government intervention will be critical in the near future. He suggested that the U.S. create licensing and testing requirements for the development of new A.I. models, and offered for OpenAI to partner with the government on creating safety frameworks. 

On Tuesday, a group of bipartisan lawmakers planned three summer hearings about the dangers of A.I.

In terms of decision making, Altman said he wants full autonomy from OpenAI shareholders, saying in Abu Dhabi that the chance that we have to make a very strange decision someday is non-trivial. Altman didnt clarify what a very strange decision could look like, but added, I dont want to be sued by public market, Wall Street etc.

OpenAI began as a nonprofit, but now operates as a capped-profit company. The capped-profit business model lets OpenAI raise external funds with the commitment that the original nonprofit will still benefit.

 OpenAI is valued at nearly $30 billion, backed by $10 billion from Microsoft.


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