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1. rjtava+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-11-20 09:35:30
I based that opinion on two news that came out:

1. When they invested in Open AI it had a more mature board (in particular Reid Hoffman) and afterwards they lost a few members without replacing them. That was probably something Microsoft could have influenced without making themselves part of the problem.

2. They received a call one minute before the decision was made public. That shouldn't happen to a partner that owns 49% of the company you just fired a CEO from.

Sources:

1 - https://loeber.substack.com/p/a-timeline-of-the-openai-board

2 - https://www.axios.com/2023/11/17/microsoft-openai-sam-altman...

replies(1): >>jacque+B1
2. jacque+B1[view] [source] 2023-11-20 09:45:04
>>rjtava+(OP)
Yes, but both of those are not Microsoft's doing but the OpenAI board's doing. You don't just get to name someone to a board without the board to agree to it and normally this happens as a condition of for instance an investment or partnership.

Nadella was rightly furious about this, the tail wagged the dog there. And this isn't over yet: you can expect a lot of change on the OpenAI side.

replies(1): >>rjtava+C8
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3. rjtava+C8[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-11-20 10:31:08
>>jacque+B1
Buying 49% of a company is a risky deal. You better make sure the other 51% have good governance.
replies(1): >>jacque+CP
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4. jacque+CP[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-11-20 14:23:29
>>rjtava+C8
Yes, that probably was a mistake, it should have come with more protections. But I haven't seen any documents on the governance other than what is in the media now and there is a fair chance that MS did have various protections but that the board simply ignored those.
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