feature image: studio Ghibli style recreation of the famous photo of Mira Murati (left), Sam Altman (standing), Greg Brockman, and Ilya Sutskever (right), by ChatGPT (duh)

Remember that weird weekend in November 2023 when Sam Altman got fired from OpenAI and then… sort of hired by Microsoft and then… reinstated at OpenAI in less than a week? I wrote three posts about that drama in between Thanksgiving madness and oh my goodness, SO MUCH has happened since. If I were to catch you up on all things OpenAI and AI related, it would take a book. (For one, I bet if you are reading this story, your relationship with ChatGPT or similar chatbot has significantly changed since 2023. You are probably too distracted to read my article in full and will go to said chatbot to ask for a summary LOL)

In any case…..

Now, over a year later, we finally have SOME clarity—thanks to new reporting by Wall Street Journal reporter Keach Hagey, who hunted down all the major sources in the story for over a year, including Sam Altman himself, and conducted over 250 interviews! Shout out to the good folks at the Hard Fork Podcast whose interview finally gave me some much needed closure (ish) on this topic!

https://x.com/sama/status/1908163013192069460?embedable=true

Tweet above: Sam Altman confirming the authenticity of the book

So without further ado, here’s what actually happened, what’s changed since then, and how everyone’s kind of regretting everything... but also getting richer?

Part 1: What Happened Since (And Why It Matters Even More Now)

Since the week after Sam got fired, then unfired in November of 2023, here are a non-exhaustive list of what has happened in that world.

  1. The board got reshuffled. Bret Taylor, Larry Summers, and Adam D’Angelo became the new grown-ups in the room. Everyone promised to work on "governance" (lol).
  2. Investigation confirmed the vibes. A law firm (WilmerHale - not to brag but a lot of UWC graduates work here. UWC of course is the education system that trained Mira Murati, and yours truly lol) hired by OpenAI concluded the board's firing of Altman was due to a "loss of trust," not a smoking gun about AI safety or some secret doomsday project. New Board agreed with the findings. Essentially, both old Board and new Board had the same facts; yet the latter had much more favorable views of Sam than the former.
  3. Key people left. Ilya Sutskever (co-founder and chief scientist) and Mira Murati (CTO) both left OpenAI for their own ventures in May and September of 2024, respectively. Ilya now runs a new startup called Safe Superintelligence Inc., which already hit a $30B valuation, while Mira founded Thinking Machines Lab, which aimed at a $9B valuation with $1B raised.
  4. Altman rejoined the board. Because of course he did.
  5. OpenAI went full steam ahead. The tender offer (where employees get to cash out some equity) went through. Sam’s reinstatement as CEO somehow “coincided” with a valuation jump from around $30B to $90B post-chaos. OpenAI is still the belle of the AI ball, and Sam Altman remains its unshakable poster child.
  6. OpenAI is trying to ditch its nonprofit origins. The company is lobbying to loosen the governance shackles imposed by its nonprofit parent—because, you know, it’s really hard to scale capitalism when you technically still report to a nonprofit mission. It’s not like anyone else at that point was still fooled about OpenAI profit mode.
  7. Elon Musk is trolling from the sidelines. Musk (one of OpenAI cofounders to refresh your memory) reportedly offered to buy OpenAI for $97.4 billion, which of course Altman rejected, citing how OpenAI is "not for sale," but the point was made. Musk is of course too busy dealing with “reshaping" the entire US government to close the deal.
  8. AI is going mainstream at breakneck speed. ChatGPT is basically the new Google for a huge chunk of the population, and the recent rollout of GPT-4 Turbo (with native image generation capabilities baked right in, like the 2 images you could see above) only poured rocket fuel on the adoption curve. Everyone from students to startups is using it, often daily, like it’s no big deal.

Part 2: So what actually caused the firing of Sam Altman?

Thanks to Keach Hagey’s new book, coming out in a few weeks, we finally got a sneak peek at the full(ish) story—on the record, from the key players. Contrary to popular belief at the time (AGI is getting close!!!!), it really was about miscommunication, personalities, and interpersonal dynamics in a fast moving industry. The through-line though, was money.

Part 3: Why come clean now?

The book also revealed some major details about the big question in probably everyone’s mind, which is: Why now? Why not then? It was such a secretive and confusing firing. Even after WilmerHale and the new Board came out with the new findings, and after many reportings about subsequent departures of key OpenAI people, nobody still really knows WHY he was fired in the first place. And we finally have some answers about why now.

Part 4: So what now?

I feel like I finally understand everything. It looks like the same traits that make Sam so effective at raising money and pushing product are the ones that make him really hard to work with or trust. It’s no coincidence that literally every major player in the AI community has had some kind of messy breakup with the guy, including his own sister (not a AI player, but I just thought it’s noteworthy to point out that his own sister is also suing him).

Yet, at the end of the day, everyone involved kinda moved on quickly from the whole incident. The board regrets how they fired him. Ilya and Mira regret triggering the chaos. Employees felt trapped between values and financial upside. Meanwhile, Sam just... wins again.

The governance experiment failed. The board was supposed to act as a counterweight to Sam’s unchecked power. But when push came to shove, the company sided with the founder. Like they always do. The nonprofit structure was supposed to safeguard humanity from corporate overreach. Instead, it caved under the same pressures it was built to resist.

So what now? We’re back where we started—Sam Altman at the helm, OpenAI chasing AGI, the board trying to stay relevant, and the rest of us watching from the sidelines. Only now we know more about what actually went down—and how fragile the whole setup really was.

OpenAI was supposed to be structured differently. Instead, it played out like every other Silicon Valley drama. Power won. Money won. And the guy who believes he’s building the future didn’t just survive—he became inevitable.

Boom. Done.