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Sam Altman’s OpenAI ouster sees rollercoaster Worldcoin price

Sam Altman’s eye-scanning world ID project saw its token price go on a wild ride over the weekend after he was fired by OpenAI.

Worldcoin (WLD), the token of Sam Altman’s retina-scanning project of the same name, saw major volatility over the past few days as he was ousted from OpenAI, reported to be in talks to make a return before finally being replaced.

WLD saw a Nov. 16 high of $2.48 before starting a slide that accelerated after Altman was outed by OpenAI late on Nov. 17 in the United States which saw it drop to a low of nearly $1.84, according to CoinGecko data.

It bounced back, surging 12% over the past 24 hours to reach an intraday high of $2.54 during Monday morning Asian trading then again dropped to $2.30 after Altman was replaced as CEO by Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear.

Seven-day WLD price. Source: CoinGecko

Altman co-founded Worldcoin which launched in July. While the project is separate from OpenAI, WLD’s initial rebound came after reported efforts by a group of OpenAI executives and investors to reinstate Altman as CEO of the artificial intelligence firm.

Worldcoin is a digital identity platform with ambitions to build a World-ID and financial system using retina scanning technology to authenticate humans amid a rise in AI technology.

Related: A timeline of Sam Altman’s outing from OpenAI

Worldcoin’s launch polarized the crypto community who raised questions about its centralization, privacy, and security.

AI-related crypto assets have been outperforming over the past 24 hours, with the market capitalization of AI-related tokens notching a 7.2% rise to $6.5 billion with tokens such as Fetch.ai (FET), SingularityNET (AGIX), and Akash Network (AKT) notching up double-digit gains according to CoinGecko.

Magazine: AI Eye — Real uses for AI in crypto, Google’s GPT-4 rival, AI edge for bad employees

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Who is Mira Murati, OpenAI’s interim CEO?

OpenAI’s new interim CEO is considered a "product person" who supports regulatory oversight of artificial intelligence.

OpenAI’s board of directors ousted founder Sam Altman on Nov. 17, shocking the technology world, while appointing Mira Murati as its interim CEO. 

Since then, the board has been facing strong criticism from the startup major clients and investors. According to a Bloomberg report, efforts to reinstate Altman as CEO have already involved Microsoft, OpenAI’s biggest shareholder.

Meanwhile, Murati is the interim CEO. She has been on OpenAI since 2018. At the time, the company operated as a nonprofit research center but soon transformed into the business behind the global chatbot ChatGPT.

Mira Murati, the 34-year-old interim CEO of OpenAI. Source: OpenAI

Prior to OpenAI, Murati reportedly spent a summer as an analyst at Goldman Sachs, followed by positions in engineering at Zodiac Aerospace and Tesla, as described in a Women’s Agenda bio based on her LinkedIn profile — unfortunately no longer available.

Murati was reportedly appointed as vice president of product and engineering at Ultraleap in 2016. At OpenAI, she joined as vice president of applied AI and partnerships, before rising to senior vice president of research, products and partnerships and, finally, to her role as chief technology officer in 2022.

The interim CEO was born in Albania and received a degree from Dartmouth College, an Ivy League institution, in 2012. According to The Wall Street Journal, Murati is a “product person", who believes that AI shouldn’t be confined to research projects.

“It’s important that we bring in different voices, like philosophers, social scientists, artists, and people from the humanities,” she said in an interview with TIME Magazine earlier this year. Regulators should be included in this group of “different voices,” according to Murati:

"It’s important for OpenAI and companies like ours to bring this into the public consciousness in a way that’s controlled and responsible. But we’re a small group of people and we need a ton more input in this system and a lot more input that goes beyond the technologies-—definitely regulators and governments and everyone else."

She is behind the development and management of some of OpenAI’s most groundbreaking projects, including the image-generator model DALL-3, the speech-recognition tool Whisper, and the latest version of the company’s chatbot GPT-4

A look at Murati’s profile on X (formerly Twitter) illustrates her engagement with product development at OpenAI. New features and product updates are the only topics she talks about on the social media platform.

Murati has not spoken publicly since the latest developments on OpenAI. She no longer has a LinkedIn profitable account, and her last post on X is from Nov. 6, when ChatGPT Turbo was released. 

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OpenAI’s crisis escalates as more staff resign after CEO removal: Report

At least three senior researchers have left OpenAI since Sam Altman was removed as the startup's CEO on Nov. 17.

The turmoil at OpenAI continues to escalate after its founder Sam Altman was abruptly ousted on Nov. 17, with three senior researchers reportedly quitting the artificial intelligence company.

OpenAI’s board of directors announced Altman's removal from the CEO position in a blog post, claiming that Altman “was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities.” According to the post, chief technology officer Mira Murati is now the interim CEO.

The decision triggered a wave of resignations in the company since then. OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman announced his departure hours later. Senior staff members at OpenAI have reportedly resigned as well, including Jakub Pachocki, director of research, Aleksander Madry, head of preparedness, and Szymon Sidor, senior researcher.

At least one employee was laid off along with Altman's removal. Alex Cohen, responsible for preparing presentations for OpenAI's board of directors, also lost his job. "No one has told me why I was let go but Sam texted me “wtf” and next thing I know my Slack and Gmail were disabled," Cohen said on X (formerly Twitter), predicting more OpenAI employees will resign in the coming days:

"I’d wager that 40% of OpenAI employees are currently looking at new roles. Sam and Greg were a big reason people joined the company and without them there I don’t know why they’d stay."

OpenAI’s decision to remove Altman is believed to stem from disagreements with Ilya Sutskever, co-founder and chief scientist at the startup, particularly in regards to new fundraising and AI development.

Altman's next steps are unclear following the recent developments. He is a founder of Tools for Humanity — the developer of the crypto project Worldcoin — and has been approached about joining new projects. Cardano's founder, Charles Hoskinson, has invited Altman to join the ecosystem's decentralized large language model (LLM).

Magazine: Are DAOs overhyped and unworkable? Lessons from the front lines

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Sam Altman ousted from OpenAI, CTO Mira Murati named interim CEO

The Board of Directors removed Altman on the grounds that he was allegedly ‘not consistently candid in his communications with the board.’

ChatGPT developer OpenAI has removed founder Sam Altman from its CEO position, according to a November 17 blog post. Chief technology officer Mira Murati will be promoted to interim CEO. According to the post, the Board of Directors engaged in a “deliberative review process,” which resulted in the conclusion that Altman “was not consistently candid in his communications with the board, hindering its ability to exercise its responsibilities.”

Altman could not immediately be reached for comment.

The Board of Directors for OpenAI stated that it remains committed to building artificial intelligence (AI) applications going forward:

“OpenAI was deliberately structured to advance our mission: to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all humanity. The board remains fully committed to serving this mission[…]Mira is exceptionally qualified to step into the role of interim CEO. We have the utmost confidence in her ability to lead OpenAI during this transition period.”

Related: OpenAI halts new ChatGPT Plus sign-ups amid high demand

The board also stated that it is “grateful for Sam’s many contributions to the founding and growth of OpenAI” but claimed that “new leadership is necessary as we move forward.” The board’s chairman, Greg Brockman, will also be stepping down from his position. However, he will remain as an employee, “reporting to the CEO,” according to the post.

The board of directors consists of Adam D’Angelo, Tasha McCauley, Helen Toner, and OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever. According to the post, the majority of board members are “independent directors” who do not hold equity in OpenAI.

Sam Altman is also the founder of Tools for Humanity, the developer of crypto project Worldcoin. Cointelegraph reached out to Tools for Humanity for comment, but did not get a response by the time of publication.

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

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Microsoft Maia AI chip ‘last puzzle piece’ for infrastructure systems

The new Microsoft Azure Maia AI Accelerator is designed for AI tasks and generative AI and was debuted in tandem with its new Azure Cobalt CPU to compute cloud workloads.

The Big Tech giant Microsoft announced the launch of a new artificial intelligence (AI) chip, the Microsoft Azure Maia AI Accelerator, according to a blog post on Nov. 15. 

The chip is designed for AI tasks and generative AI and debuted alongside the Microsoft Azure Cobalt CPU, which was designed to compute workloads on Microsoft Cloud. Microsoft called the two chips the “last puzzle piece” for Microsoft infrastructure systems.

According to the announcement, the chips will arrive in early 2024 first in Microsoft’s data centers where they will help power its Copilot or Azure OpenAI Service.

Scott Guthrie, the executive vice president of Microsoft’s Cloud + AI Group commented on the integration of the chip into the company’s data centers saying that:

“At the scale we operate, it’s important for us to optimize and integrate every layer of the infrastructure stack to maximize performance, diversify our supply chain and give customers infrastructure choice.”

The AI company OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft, is said to have provided feedback on the new Maia 100 AI Accelerator and how its own workloads run on top of the new infrastructure. 

Sam Altman, OpenAI’s CEO, said that these new chips will help make their AI models more “capable” and “cheaper” for its users.

Related: Chinese AI chip market finds expansion paths despite US export restrictions

Alongside these new Microsoft chips, the company also announced its expanding partnerships with two of the world’s major chip manufacturers Nvidia and AMD. It plans to integrate some of the manufacturers’ high performing chips into its operations.

This news comes as many major companies in the tech and AI industry are ramping up production of semiconductor chips. 

In October Samsung revealed that it is developing AI chips and intellectual property for data centers. with the Canadian startup Tenstorrent. Shortly after, there were reports of OpenAi considering making AI chips in-house.

Most recently on Oct. 22 the global tech company IBM unveiled its new AI chip, which it claims offers 22x speedup and is reported to be more energy efficient than any current chip available.

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OpenAI halts new ChatGPT Plus sign-ups amid high demand

According to the CEO, new sign-ups have been paused because the platform has exceeded its capacity, thus affecting users’ quality of experience.

OpenAI, the company behind the popular artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot ChatGPT, said it has put on hold new signups for the premium version of the AI tool, ChatGPT Plus, due to a high surge in usage after DevDay.

The company’s CEO, Sam Altman, announced this via a post on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) on Wednesday, Nov. 15. According to him, new sign-ups are paused because the platform has exceeded its capacity, thus affecting users’ quality of experience. Atman said the ChatGPT Plus has seen a surge in usage since OpenAI’s DevDay, where it announced some new APIs about a week ago.

The CEO said although new registrations are temporarily suspended, users can still check in within the app to be notified when subscriptions reopen. The decision to pause new ChatGPT signups follows a week where OpenAI services – including ChatGPT and the API – experienced a series of outages related to high-demand and DDoS attacks.

The pause should mean that developers working on building GPTs and using the API encounter fewer issues (like being unable to save GPT drafts). But it could also mean a temporary decrease in new users of GPTs since they are only available to Plus subscribers.

Related: Google sues scammers over creation of fake Bard AI chatbot

Following the introduction of GPTs, developers and companies have built GPTs for various purposes, such as graphic design from Canva. Search marketers already subscribed to ChatGPT Plus can try GPTs for helpful content assessment and learning SEO.

ChatGPT is one of the most popular AI chat programs, with over 180 million users, according to SimilarWeb data cited by Reuters. But it faces increasing competition from Google’s Bard and Anthropic’s Claude 2. On Nov. 5, Elon Musk announced that he had created his own AI chat program, “Grok.”

The artificial intelligence company has increasingly expanded its scope recently after partnering with startup Humane to launch a physical AI device, AI pin. The device serves as a wearable AI virtual assistant.

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Google sues scammers over creation of fake Bard AI chatbot

Google has filed a lawsuit against scammers offering a malicious version of its AI chatbot Bard that tricks users into downloading and installing malware on their devices.

Google has filed a lawsuit against three scammers for creating fake advertisements for updates to Google’s artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot Bard, among other things, which, when downloaded, installs malware.

The lawsuit was filed on Nov. 13 and names the defendants as “DOES 1-3,” as they remain anonymous. Google says that the scammers have used its trademarks specifically relating to its AI products, such as “Google, Google AI, and Bard,” to “lure unsuspecting victims into downloading malware onto their computers.”

It gave an example of deceptive social media pages and trademarked content that make it look like a Google product, with invitations to download free versions of Bard and other AI products.

Screenshot of fake “Google AI” social media page used by scammers. Source: Court documents (Google)

Google said that unsuspecting users unknowingly download the malware by following the links, which are designed to access and exploit users’ social media login credentials and primarily target businesses and advertisers. 

The tech giant asked the court for damages, an award of attorneys’ fees, permanent injunctive relief for injuries inflicted by the defendants, all profits obtained by the scammers, a comprehensive restraining order and anything else the court deems “just and equitable.”

Related: OpenAI promises to fund legal costs for ChatGPT users sued over copyright

The lawsuit comes as AI services, including chatbot services, have seen a significant increase in users worldwide. According to recent data, Google’s Bard bot gets 49.7 million unique visitors each month. 

OpenAI’s popular AI chatbot service, ChatGPT, has more than 100 million monthly users with nearly 1.5 billion monthly visitors to its website.

This upsurge in popularity and accessibility of AI services has also brought many lawsuits against the companies developing the technology. OpenAI, Google and Meta — the parent company of Facebook and Instagram — have all been caught up in legal battles in the past year.

In July, Google was brought into a class-action lawsuit. Eight individuals who filed on behalf of “millions of class members,” such as internet users and copyright holders, said that Google had violated their privacy and property rights. It came after Google updated its new privacy policy with data scraping capabilities for AI training purposes.

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Elon slings AI-generated insults at GPT-4 after OpenAI’s CEO mocks Grok

Sam Altman posted a meme on X accusing Grok of being a GPT designed to make grandpa jokes. Musk may have proved the OpenAI CEO’s point with his clap back.

The launch of Elon Musk’s new “Grok” artificial intelligence (AI) system may not have made waves throughout the machine learning community or directly threatened the status quo, but it’s certainly drawn the attention of Sam Altman, the CEO of ChatGPT maker OpenAI. 

In a post on the social media app X, formerly Twitter, Altman compared Grok’s comedic chops to that of a grandpa, saying that it creates jokes similar to “your dad’s dad.”

In classic Musk form, the Tesla/X/SpaceX/Neuralink/Boring Company CEO apparently couldn’t resist the challenge. His response, which he claims was written by Grok, starts off by tapping into a comedic classic, rhyming "GPT-4" with the word "snore" before dusting off an antique “screen door on a submarine” reference.

However, in more modern fashion, Grok’s “comedy” quickly spirals into what appears to be an angry machine diatribe, remarking that humor is banned at OpenAI and adding “that’s why it couldn't tell a joke if it had a goddamn instruction manual” before stating that GPT-4 has a “stick so far up its ass that it can taste the bark!”

Related: Elon Musk launches AI chatbot ‘Grok,’ says it can outperform ChatGPT

As far as CEO v CEO squabbles go, this one may lack the classic nuance and savoir faire of the legendary Silicon Valley battles of yesteryear (Bill Gates vs Steve Jobs, for example), but what todays’ kerfuffle lacks in comedic weight or grace, it might perhaps make up for in general wierdness.

In the above video, a grinning Bill Gates lords over Apple’s MacWorld 1997 event in a giant screen above Steve Jobs after Microsoft’s $150 million stock purchase in the company.

Altman and Musk go way back. Both were co-founders at OpenAI before the latter left the company just in time to avoid getting swept up in the rocket-like momentum that's carried it to a two-billion dollar valuation.

In the wake of OpenAI's success, which has largely been attributed to the efficacy of its GPT-3 and GPT-4 LLM models, Musk joined a chorus of voices calling for a six-month pause in AI development largely prompted by as-yet unfounded fears surrounding the supposed potential for chatbots to cause the extinction of the human species.

Six months later, nearly to the day, Musk and X unveiled a chatbot model that the CEO claims outperforms ChatGPT.

 Dubbed “Grok,” Musk's version of a better chatbot is an LLM supposedly fine-tuned to generate humorous texts in the vein of “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” a celebrated science fiction novel written by Douglas Adams.

Adams’ literary work is widely regarded as foundational pieces in the pantheon of comedic science fiction and fantasy. His humor has been described by pundits and literary critics as clever, witty, and full of both heart and humanity.

And that brings us to GPT-4, OpenAI’s recently-launched “GPTs” feature which allows users to define a personality for their ChatGPT interface, and Musk’s full-throated insistence that Grok is funnier.

It’s currently unclear which model is more robust or capable. There are no standard, accepted benchmarks for LLMs (or comedy, for that matter). 

While OpenAI has published several research papers detailing ChatGPT’s abilities, X hasn’t so far proffered any such details about Grok beyond claiming that it outscores GPT-3.5 (an outdated model of the LLM powering ChatGPT) on certain metrics.

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OpenAI and Microsoft partner with Humane on wearable AI pin

AI startup Humane launched the wearable virtual assistant AI Pin that is embedded with technology from OpenAI and cloud computing services from Microsoft.

The artificial intelligence (AI) startup Humane released a physical device on Nov. 10 that serves as a wearable AI virtual assistant. 

The AI Pin is a lapel pin-style device that the user wears and taps to speak with a virtual AI-powered assistant. It is equipped with technology from OpenAI, the creator of the well-known chatbot ChatGPT, and has cloud computing capabilities via Microsoft.

According to Humane, users can also interact with the pin via an intuitive touchpad, holding up objects, performing gestures and through its laser ink display that is projected onto the palm.

It says the pin will be able to craft messages in the “tone of voice” of the user, sort emails, provide AI-driven music experiences, and it includes an AI-powered photographer. “Ai Pin can also act as your foreign language interpreter,” it reads, “and support your nutrition goals by identifying food using computer vision.”

In a statement the co-founders of Humane, Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno, said:

“Ai Pin is the embodiment of our vision to integrate AI into the fabric of daily life, enhancing our capabilities without overshadowing our humanity.

Humane says it is also launching its own MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) connected by telecom company T-Mobile to provide wireless service for the device.

Related: Biden AI executive order ‘certainly challenging’ for open-source AI — Industry insiders

The pin is available to order in the United States from Nov. 16 and begins at $699 for the entire system, along with a monthly subscription of $24 per month which includes a cell phone number for the pin and cell services.

Humane was founded by ex-Apple employees who worked on the iPhone and has raised $241 million from investments by major players in the space including Sam Altman - CEO of OpenAI- and Microsoft.

The AI Pin comes on the heels of many fast-moving developments in the AI space over the last week. 

On Nov. 5 Elon Musk and his AI startup xAI launched chatbot Grok which he said could outperform ChatGPT, which is currently hailed as one of the world’s most advanced chatbots.

The next day OpenAI announced new ChatGPT features that allow subscribers to create their very own GPTs

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Biden AI executive order ‘certainly challenging’ for open-source AI — industry insiders

The executive order on AI safety from the Biden Administration has laid out its standards for the industry though its vagueness has raised concerns among the AI community over stifling innovation.

Last week the administration of United States President Joe Biden issued a lengthy executive order intended to protect citizens, government agencies and companies through ensuring AI safety standards. 

The order established six new standards for AI safety and security, along with intentions for ethical AI usage within government agencies. Biden said the order aligns with the government’s own principles of “safety, security, trust, openness.”

It includes sweeping mandates such as sharing results of safety tests with officials for companies developing “any foundation model that poses a serious risk to national security, national economic security, or national public health and safety” and “ accelerating the development and use of privacy-preserving techniques.” 

However, the lack of details accompanying such statements has left many in the industry wondering how it could potentially stifle companies from developing top-tier models.

Adam Struck, a founding partner at Struck Capital and AI investor, told Cointelegraph that the order displays a level of “seriousness around the potential of AI to reshape every industry.”

He also pointed out that for developers, anticipating future risks according to the legislation based on assumptions of products that aren’t fully developed yet is tricky.

“This is certainly challenging for companies and developers, particularly in the open-source community, where the executive order was less directive.”

However, he said the administration's intentions to manage the guidelines through chiefs of AI and AI governance boards in specific regulatory agencies means that companies building models within those agencies should have a “tight understanding of regulatory frameworks” from that agency. 

“Companies that continue to value data compliance and privacy and unbiased algorithmic foundations should operate within a paradigm that the government is comfortable with.”

The government has already released over 700 use cases as to how it is using AI internally via its ‘ai.gov’ website. 

Martin Casado, a general partner at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, posted on X, formerly Twitter, that he, along with several researchers, academics and founders in AI, has sent a letter to the Biden Administration over its potential for restricting open source AI.

“We believe strongly that open source is the only way to keep software safe and free from monopoly. Please help amplify,” he wrote.

The letter called the executive order “overly broad” in its definition of certain AI model types and expressed fears of smaller companies getting tangled up in the requirements necessary for other, larger companies.

Jeff Amico, the head of operations at Gensyn AI, also posted a similar sentiment, calling it “terrible” for innovation in the U.S.

Related: Adobe, IBM, Nvidia join US President Biden’s efforts to prevent AI misuse

Struck also highlighted this point, saying that while regulatory clarity can be “helpful for companies that are building AI-first products,” it is also important to note that goals of “Big Tech” like OpenAI or Anthropic greatly differ from seed-stage AI startups.

“I would like to see the interests of these earlier stage companies represented in the conversations between the government and the private sector, as it can ensure that the regulatory guidelines aren’t overly favorable to just the largest companies in the world.”

Matthew Putman, the CEO and co-founder of Nanotronics - a global leader in AI-enabled manufacturing, also commented to Cointelegraph that the order signals a need for regulatory frameworks that ensure consumer safety and the ethical development of AI on a broader scale.

“How these regulatory frameworks are implemented now depends on regulators’ interpretations and actions,” he said.

“As we have witnessed with cryptocurrency, heavy-handed constraints have hindered the exploration of potentially revolutionary applications.” 

Putman said that fears about AI’s “apocalyptic” potential are “overblown relative to its prospects for near-term positive impact.” 

He said it’s easier for those not directly involved in building the technology to construct narratives around the hypothetical dangers without really observing the “truly innovative” applications, which he says are taking place outside of public view.

Industries including advanced manufacturing, biotech, and energy are, in Putman’s words, “driving a sustainability revolution” with new autonomous process controls that are significantly improving yields and reducing waste and emissions.

“These innovations would not have been discovered without purposeful exploration of new methods. Simply put, AI is far more likely to benefit us than destroy us.”

While the executive order is still fresh and industry insiders are rushing to analyze its intentions, the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the Department of Commerce have already begun soliciting members for its newly-established Artificial Intelligence (AI) Safety Institute Consortium.

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