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Wired AI 16일 전

머스크 vs 올트먼 재판의 진짜 패배자들

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일론 머스크와 샘 올트먼의 OpenAI 비영리 이사회 설립 목적 위반 여부를 다룬 재판이 마무리되었습니다. 이 과정에서 두 거물이 치열하게 통제권을 다투는 동안, 회사의 초기 비영리 미션을 믿었던 직원들과 대중만이 피해를 보았다는 사실이 드러났습니다. 막대한 자본을 앞세운 영리 추구가 남발되면서, 전 인류를 위한 AGI 개발이라는 본래의 공공 목적은 훼손될 위기에 처했습니다.

번역된 본문

목요일에 열린 머스크 대 올트먼 재판에서 변호사들은 각자의 의뢰인인 일론 머스크와 샘 올트먼이야말로 OpenAI의 설립 비영리 미션을 가장 잘 수호하는 진정한 의도를 가진 진실된 인물이라고 판사와 배심원을 설득하기 위한 최후 변론을 펼쳤다. 기술 업계에서 가장 영향력 있는 두 기업인 간의 10년에 걸친 싸움은 다음 주에 판결이 나면서 막을 내릴 수 있다. 그러나 재판 결과와 관계없이 이 사건에는 수많은 패배자들이 존재한다. 제시된 방대한 증거들에 따르면, 가장 큰 피해를 입은 것은 비영리 연구소의 미션을 믿고 그래서 OpenAI를 지지했던 직원, 정책 입안자, 그리고 일반 대중인 것으로 보인다.

거의 모든 상황에서 머스크와 OpenAI의 다른 공동 창립자들이 우선시한 것은 세계 최고의 AI 연구소를 구축하는 것이었으며, 그 과정에서 수십억 달러 규모의 영리 추구 기업을 만들어야 했음에도 그것을 감수했다. 비영리 및 혁신 분야 전문가인 노스웨스턴 대학교 법학과 질 호비츠(Jill Horwitz) 교수는 최후 변론을 경청한 후 다음과 같이 말했다. "어느 쪽이 공공의 이익을 보호하고 있는지 알기 어렵습니다. 비영리 단체에 관한 사건에서 궁극적으로 위태로워지는 것은 바로 이 공공의 이익입니다. 누가 이기든 비영리 단체의 공공의 이익은 위험에 처해 있습니다."

OpenAI의 공식적인 사명은 범용 인공지능(AGI, Artificial General Intelligence)이 인류에게 혜택을 주도록 보장하는 것이지만, 이번 재판에서 인류는 당사자가 아니다. 실제로 OpenAI는 지난 10년 동안 구글(Google)과 같은 수조 달러 규모의 기업과 경쟁하려 시도하며 AGI를 가장 먼저 구축하는 데 집중해 왔다. 또한 머스크와 올트먼은 OpenAI를 통제하기 위해 사활을 걸고 싸워왔다.

회사의 안전 문화에 우려를 제기하며 2022년에 합류했던 전 OpenAI 연구원 다니엘 코코타즐로(Daniel Kokotajlo)는 다음과 같이 말했다. "머스크와 올트먼은 기본적으로 슈퍼인텔리전스를 가장 먼저 구축하기 위한 경주에 돌입해 있으며, 상대방이 승리할 경우 무엇을 할지 두려워하고 있습니다. 우리 나머지 사람들은 그들 두 사람 모두를 두려워해야 합니다." 그는 이번 재판에서 OpenAI의 영리 전환에 반대하며 의견서를 제출한 전직 OpenAI 연구원 그룹의 일원이었다. 이들은 비영리 구조가 회사 합류 결정에 있어 결정적이었다고 주장했다.

(제보 요청: 현재 또는 과거에 OpenAI나 테슬라에서 일했으며 현재 상황에 대해 이야기하고 싶은 직원이 있습니까? 업무용이 아닌 개인 휴대전화나 컴퓨터를 사용하여 Signal(Mzeff.88 및 Peard33.24)을 통해 기자에게 안전하게 연락해 주시기 바랍니다.)

재판에서 OpenAI의 비영리 재단은 마치 또 다른 기업 투자자인 것처럼 논의되었다. OpenAI의 변호인단은 영리 회사 지분의 2,000억 달러를 비영리 재단에 부여하는 것이 OpenAI가 자신들의 사명을 다하고 있다는 증거라고 주장했다. 하지만 공공 옹호 단체들은 자금 조달만으로는 충분하지 않다는 입장이다.

이번 사건 초기에 OpenAI의 구조 조정에 반대하는 의견서를 제출한 AI 안전 비영리 단체 '인코드(Encode)'의 정책 담당 부사장 네이선 캘빈(Nathan Calvin)은 다음과 같이 말했다. "OpenAI 재단이 좋은 일을 할 수 있는 많은 자선 자원을 확보하게 된 것을 기뻐하는 많은 사람들 중 한 명입니다. 하지만 비영리 단체 또한 거버넌스 역할을 수행한다는 점, 그리고 비영리 단체의 사명은 전형적인 재단의 그것과 달리 AGI가 모든 인류에게 혜택을 주도록 보장하는 것임을 기억할 가치가 있습니다. 자금은 그 목표를 위해 중요하고 다른 조건이 같을 때 유용하지만, 그것이 그 자체로 목적은 아닙니다."

기원 이야기 이 사건에서 공개된 증거들은 올트먼과 머스크가 OpenAI를 비영리 단체로 설립하고 일반적인 스타트업처럼 운영하는 데 동의했음을 시사한다. 그들은 AGI 개발 경쟁에서 구글 딥마인드(Google DeepMind)를 이기겠다는 공동의 목표를 공유했다. 하지만 비영리 단체로서 OpenAI를 창립한 것은 그 경쟁에서 승리하기 위한 수단으로서 끔찍하게 불편한 방식으로 판명되었다.

머스크는 OpenAI의 CEO인 올트먼과 공동 창립자 겸 사장인 그렉 브록먼(Greg Brockman)이 비영리의 설립 사명을 벗어났다고 비난했다. 그는 창립자들이 그의 3...

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Comment Loader Save Story Save this story Comment Loader Save Story Save this story Attorneys delivered closing arguments in the Musk v. Altman trial on Thursday in a final attempt to convince a judge and jury that their respective clients, Elon Musk and Sam Altman, are the most well-intentioned, truth-telling stewards of OpenAI’s founding nonprofit mission. A judgement could be delivered as soon as next week, ending a decade-long battle between two of the technology industry’s most influential entrepreneurs. But regardless of the outcome, there is a wide set of losers in this case. Based on ample amounts of evidence, it appears that the people worst off are the employees, policy makers, and members of the public who believed in the mission of a nonprofit research lab—and supported OpenAI because of it. What seemed to take precedent for Musk and OpenAI’s other cofounders at almost every turn was building the world’s leading AI lab—even if that meant creating a multibillion dollar for-profit company in the process. “It's hard to see how the public interest is being protected by either of these parties, and that is really what is ultimately at stake in a case about a nonprofit,” says Jill Horwitz, a Northwestern University law professor with expertise in nonprofits and innovation, who listened to the closing arguments. “The public interest in the nonprofit is at risk no matter who wins.” OpenAI's stated mission is to ensure artificial general intelligence (AGI) benefits humanity, but humanity is not a party in this case. In practice, OpenAI has spent the last decade attempting to rival multitrillion dollar companies like Google, and build AGI first. Additionally, Musk and Altman have fought tooth and nail to be the ones who control OpenAI. “Musk and Altman are basically locked in a race to be the first to build superintelligence, and they both rightly fear what the other will do if they win. The rest of us should fear them both,” says Daniel Kokotajlo, a former OpenAI researcher who joined in 2022 and has raised concerns over the company’s safety culture . He was part of a group of former OpenAI researchers that filed an amicus brief in this case against OpenAI’s for-profit conversion, arguing that the nonprofit structure was critical in their decision to join the company. Got a Tip? Are you a current or former OpenAI or Tesla employee who wants to talk about what's happening? We'd like to hear from you. Using a nonwork phone or computer, contact the reporters securely on Signal at Mzeff.88 and Peard33.24. At trial, OpenAI’s nonprofit was discussed as if it were yet another corporate investor. OpenAI’s lawyers argued that giving the nonprofit a $200 billion stake in the for-profit company is proof that OpenAI is fulfilling its mission. Public advocacy groups disagree that funding alone is sufficient. “I am among the many people who are glad to see how many philanthropic resources the OpenAI foundation has at its disposal to do good work,” says Nathan Calvin, VP of state affairs for the AI safety nonprofit Encode, which filed an amicus brief opposing OpenAI’s restructuring earlier in this case. “But it’s worth remembering that the nonprofit also has a governance role, and that the mission of the nonprofit is not that of a typical foundation, it is specifically to ensure that AGI benefits all of humanity. Money is important for that goal and is useful all else equal, but it is not the goal in and of itself.” Origin Story Evidence revealed in this case suggests Altman and Musk were in agreement about OpenAI launching as a nonprofit and operating much like a typical startup. They shared the goal of beating Google DeepMind in the race to AGI. But creating OpenAI as a nonprofit turned out to be a horribly inconvenient means to winning that race. Musk has accused Altman, OpenAI’s CEO, and Greg Brockman, its cofounder and president, of straying from the nonprofit’s founding mission. He claims the founders used his $38 million investment to turn OpenAI into an $850 billion company and make several of its cofounders billionaires . To win this case, Musk has to convince a jury and judge that he attached certain conditions to his investment, specifically that OpenAI could only use the money for a charitable purpose, and that he filed the case in a timely manner. In response, OpenAI has argued that Musk has failed to prove either of these accusations, and that he simply has sour grapes for losing control of the AI lab. In one of the first emails Altman sent to Musk about setting up “some sort of nonprofit” that ultimately became OpenAI, in May 2015, he wrote that the people working on it would get “startup-like compensation.” Musk said it was “worth a conversation.” Virtually nothing presented at trial has explained what the business partners planned to do if the nonprofit ended up with more money than it needed. There were some discussions about open sourcing technology, but OpenAI’s lawyers have argued there was never any agreement about doing so. In practice, the focus appeared to be on buying expensive servers to generate more powerful AI models, albeit with significant research into developing safeguards around them. In her closing argument, OpenAI lawyer Sarah Eddy said it was essentially “uncontested” among the cofounders that they would eventually need more money than they could ever hope to raise through donations alone. She cited Ilya Sutskever’s testimony that “the mission of OpenAI is larger than a structure.” Eddy went on to say that if OpenAI hadn’t obtained the funds it needed, the mission would have collapsed. OpenAI’s cofounders have repeatedly said, in emails and testimonies, that they have benefited from the nonprofit structure and mission. They argued it gave OpenAI “ moral high ground, ” which would prove strategically valuable in its quest to overtake Google DeepMind. The nonprofit mission was used to attract research talent, as well as garner goodwill among policymakers and the public. But throughout OpenAI’s history, the nonprofit structure was apparently seen as a roadblock to building OpenAI into a massive business. In December 2016, Musk wrote an email to OpenAI’s cofounders saying that setting up OpenAI “as a non-profit might, in hindsight, have been the wrong move,” adding that the “sense of urgency is not as high.” The following year, Musk and the cofounders tried to create a for-profit arm, and even considered scrapping the nonprofit entirely. However, the talks broke down after Musk requested control of the company and Brockman and Sutskever asked for large equity stakes. Around this time, Brockman wrote in his diary about how OpenAI could make him a billionaire. Shortly after these talks, in February 2018, Musk suggested folding OpenAI into Tesla—his for-profit car company—and even tried to recruit Altman to run the AI unit, offering him a Tesla board seat to entice him. Shivon Zilis , Musk’s deputy and the mother of four of his children, wrote in text messages at the time that Altman and Brockman had not “internalized the advantages of burying this in Tesla for stealth advantage.” In an FAQ Zilis wrote for the proposed Tesla AI group, she said that its strategy hadn’t been determined but that it “may be deeply proprietary.” Kevin Scott, Microsoft’s chief technology officer, wondered around that time whether early OpenAI donors such as tech investor Reid Hoffman were okay with OpenAI essentially becoming a for-profit company. “I can’t imagine that they funded an open effort to concentrate [machine learning] talent so that they could then go build a closed, for profit thing on its back,” he wrote in an email to his boss. Hoffman relayed that he didn’t mind, and Microsoft later agreed to deepen its financial and technical support of OpenAI after it launched a for-profit arm. During OpenAI’s brief ouster of Altman in November 2023, which has been rehashed ad nauseum in this trial , text messages show that Altman a