Documents show OpenAI’s long journey from non-profit to USD157B valued company

2024

AP – Back in 2016, a scientific research organisation incorporated in Delaware and based in Mountain View, California, applied to be recognised as a tax-exempt charitable organisation by the Internal Revenue Service.

Called OpenAI, the non-profit told the IRS its goal was to “advance digital intelligence in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole, unconstrained by a need to generate financial return”.

Its assets included a USD10 million loan from one of its four founding directors and now Chief Executive Officer, Sam Altman.

The application, which non-profits are required to disclose and which OpenAI provided to The Associated Press, offers a view back in time to the origins of the artificial intelligence giant that has since grown to include a for-profit subsidiary recently valued at USD157 billion by investors.

It’s one measure of the vast distance OpenAI – and the technology that it researches and develops – has travelled in under a decade.

In the application, OpenAI indicated it did not plan to enter into any joint ventures with for-profit organisations, which it has since done. It also said it did “not plan to play any role in developing commercial products or equipment”, and promised to make its research freely available to the public.

OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman at the Advancing Sustainable Development through Safe, Secure and Trustworthy AI Event in New York, United States. PHOTO: AFP

A spokesperson for OpenAI, Liz Bourgeois, said in an e-mail that the organisation’s missions and goals have remained constant, though the way it’s carried out its mission has evolved alongside advances in technology. She also said the non-profit does not carry out any commercial activities.

Attorneys who specialise in advising non-profits have been watching OpenAI’s meteoric rise and its changing structure closely. Some wonder if its size and the scale of its current ambitions have reached or exceeded the limits of how non-profits and for-profits may interact.

They also wonder the extent to which its primary activities advance its charitable mission, which it must, and whether some may privately benefit from its work, which is prohibited.

In general, non-profit experts agree that OpenAI has gone to great lengths to arrange its corporate structure to comply with the rules that govern non-profit organisations. OpenAI’s application to the IRS appears typical, said Andrew Steinberg, counsel at Venable LLP and a member of the American Bar Association’s non-profit organisations committee.

If the organisation’s plans and structure changed, it would need to report that information on its annual tax returns, Steinberg said, which it has.

“At the time that the IRS reviewed the application, there wasn’t information that that corporate structure that exists today and the investment structure that they pursued was what they had in mind,” he said. “And that’s okay because that may have developed later.”

Here are some highlights from the application:

EARLY RESEARCH GOALS

At inception, OpenAI’s research plans look quaint in light of the race to develop AI that was in part set off by its release of ChatGPT in 2022.

OpenAI told the IRS it planned to train an AI agent to solve a wide variety of games. It aimed to build a robot to perform housework and to develop a technology that could “follow complex instructions in natural language”.

Today, its products, which include text-to-image generators and chatbots that can detect emotion and write code, far exceed those technical thresholds.

NO COMMERCIAL AMBITIONS

The non-profit OpenAI indicated on the application form that it had no plans to enter into joint ventures with for-profit entities.

It also wrote, “OpenAI does not plan to play any role in developing commercial products or equipment. It intends to make its research freely available to the public on a nondiscriminatory basis.”

OpenAI spokesperson Bourgeois said the organisation believes the best way to accomplish its mission is to develop products that help people use AI to solve problems, including many products it offers for free. But they also believe developing commercial partnerships has helped further their mission, she said.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

OpenAI reported to the IRS in 2016 that regularly sharing its research “with the general public is central to the mission of OpenAI. OpenAI will regularly release its research results on its website and share software it has developed with the world under open source software licences”.

It also wrote it “intends to retain the ownership of any intellectual property it develops”.

The value of that intellectual property and whether it belongs to the non-profit or for-profit subsidiary could become important questions if OpenAI decides to alter its corporate structure, as Altman confirmed in September it was considering.