OpenAI

Organization Profile

OpenAI is an American artificial intelligence research and deployment company headquartered at 1455 3rd Street, San Francisco, California. Originally founded as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in December 2015, it restructured into a “capped-profit” subsidiary in 2019 and completed conversion to a Public Benefit Corporation in October 2025. The nonprofit entity was renamed the OpenAI Foundation, retaining approximately 26% financial stake in OpenAI Group. [1][2][3]

OpenAI develops large-scale generative AI models and consumer-facing products, including ChatGPT, GPT-series models, DALL-E, Whisper, Sora, and developer APIs. ChatGPT has over 800 million weekly active users as of early 2026. OpenAI’s revenue reached approximately $20 billion in 2025 and is projected at $29 billion for 2026. The company is not yet profitable, with approximately $8 billion in cash burn in 2025. [4][5]

Sam Altman, CEO since 2019, has stated he holds zero equity in OpenAI — a claim made under oath before the US Senate in May 2023 and repeated in subsequent contexts. At the company’s $852 billion valuation (March 2026), this makes OpenAI the most valuable company in history led by someone who claims to own none of it. [1][5][6]


Basic Information

FieldValueNotes
Legal nameOpenAI Global, LLC (PBC)Since October 2025 conversion [2]
ParentOpenAI Foundation (501(c)(3))Retains ~26% stake + board appointment + safety veto [2]
Previous structureOpenAI, Inc. (nonprofit) → OpenAI LP (capped-profit, 2019) → PBC (2025)Three structural transformations in 10 years [1][2][3]
FoundedDecember 8, 2015As nonprofit [1]
Tax-exempt statusReceived 2016[3]
HQ1455 3rd Street (Pioneer Building), San Francisco, CAMission District [1]
CEOSam AltmanClaims zero equity [6]
CEO of ApplicationsFidji SimoFormer Instacart CEO (Moritz on Instacart board) [1]
PresidentGreg BrockmanOn sabbatical Aug 2024, returned Nov 2024 [1]
CFOSarah Friar[1]
Employees~8,800As of April 2026 [4]
Valuation$852 billionMarch 2026 SoftBank round [5]
Revenue (2025)~$20 billion10x growth from 2023 ($2B) [5]
Monthly revenue~$2 billionAs of March 2026 [5]
Gross margin33%Down from 40% in 2024 — inference cost pressure [5]
Weekly active users900 million+ChatGPT [5]
Paying subscribers50 million+Across all tiers [5]
InvestorsMicrosoft (27%), employees/investors (47%), Foundation (26%)[1]

Founding

OpenAI was co-founded in December 2015 by Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Elon Musk, Ilya Sutskever, and others including Trevor Blackwell, Vicki Cheung, Andrej Karpathy, Durk Kingma, John Schulman, Pamela Vagata, and Wojciech Zaremba. Founding donors and backers included Jessica Livingston, Peter Thiel, Reid Hoffman, Amazon Web Services, Infosys, and YC Research. The group pledged over $1 billion, though per TechCrunch investigation, YC Research “did not contribute anything at all.” [1][7][8]

OpenAI was initially listed as a YC Research project. Sam Altman’s September 2016 blog post explicitly classified OpenAI alongside Basic Income, HARC, and Cities as one of four “groups” under YC Research. OpenAI later became operationally independent, though the exact date of formal separation from YC Research is not publicly documented. [8][9]

The founding dinner took place at the Rosewood Hotel in August 2015. Greg Brockman was introduced to Sam Altman by Patrick Collison (Stripe CEO). [1][10]


Corporate Structure Evolution

DateStructureKey Change
Dec 2015501(c)(3) nonprofit“Ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity” [1]
2016Tax-exempt status received[3]
Mar 2019OpenAI LP created — “capped-profit” for-profit subsidiaryProfit cap set at 100x investor returns. Nonprofit parent retains control. Altman becomes CEO. [1][2][3]
Jul 2019Microsoft invests $1 billionMostly Azure credits [1][11]
~2021Profit cap reducedFrom 100x to “single digits” — without public announcement [3]
Jan 2023Microsoft invests ~$10 billion more[1]
Nov 2022ChatGPT launchedConsumer product that changed public AI awareness globally [1]
Oct 2025PBC conversion completedNonprofit becomes “OpenAI Foundation” with ~26% stake. Foundation no longer controls the for-profit. [2]
Mar 2026$122 billion funding roundSoftBank-led. $852B valuation. Largest single-round funding in history. [5]

Public Citizen argued OpenAI should pay at least $30 billion to convert — based on a 20-30% control premium at the then-$150 billion valuation. The California Attorney General launched an investigation. Meta wrote to the AG calling the precedent of “seismic implications for Silicon Valley” — allowing startups to use nonprofit status during unprofitable development and convert once profitable. [3][12]

Bloomberg Tax analysis: a charitable nonprofit can never truly “convert” to a for-profit under law, because once an entity has tax-exempt status, its assets must “forever exist” for charitable purposes. [3]


Board of Directors — Current (Post-PBC Conversion)

NameRoleNotes
Bret TaylorChairmanAppointed after Nov 2023 reinstatement [1]
Adam D’AngeloDirectorQuora CEO. Only board member who voted to fire Altman in Nov 2023 who remained on the board. Originally selected by Altman in 2018 as Musk’s replacement. [1][13]
Larry SummersDirectorFormer US Treasury Secretary. Appointed after Nov 2023 reinstatement. [1]
Fidji SimoCEO of Applications / DirectorFormer Instacart CEO [1]
Sue Desmond-HellmannDirectorFormer Gates Foundation CEO [1]
Nicole SeligmanDirector[1]

Board of Directors — Removed November 2023

NameWhy They Were Removed
Helen TonerCo-authored paper on AI safety perceived as critical of OpenAI [1]
Tasha McCauleyVoted to fire Altman [1]
Ilya SutskeverInitially voted to fire Altman, then reportedly wavered [1]

Key Personnel

NameTitleNotes
Sam AltmanCEOClaims zero equity. $76,001 salary per 2023 IRS filing. $2.8B personal investment portfolio in 400+ companies. [1][5][6]
Greg BrockmanPresidentCo-founder. Private diary entered as evidence in Musk trial: “This is the only chance we have to get out from Elon… Financially, what will take me to $1B?” (Sep 2017). Sabbatical Aug-Nov 2024. [1][10][14]
Fidji SimoCEO of ApplicationsFormer Instacart CEO. Championed TBPN acquisition then took medical leave the next day. [1]
Brad LightcapSpecial Projects (formerly COO)Moved from COO to “special projects” reporting directly to Altman on April 3, 2026 — 27 days before Musk trial. Executes Altman-adjacent deals. [15]
Chris LehaneChief Strategy OfficerFormer Clinton “Master of Disaster.” Ran Altman’s crisis response during Nov 2023 firing (then at Airbnb). Now formally at OpenAI. [1]
Sarah FriarCFOFormer Square/Block CFO [1]

Products

ProductLaunchedDescription
GPT-1Jun 2018First generative pre-trained transformer [1]
GPT-2Feb 2019Initially withheld citing misuse concerns [1]
GPT-3Jun 2020Same month as Project Covalence launch [1]
DALL-EJan 2021Image generation [1]
ChatGPTNov 2022Consumer chatbot — 100M users in 2 months [1]
GPT-4Mar 2023Multimodal [1]
Sora2024Video generation [1]
GPT-5.5 / o32025Reasoning models [1]
ChatGPT ProDec 2024$200/month tier — 5.8% of consumer revenue [5]

Funding History

RoundDateAmountLead / Key Investors
FoundingDec 2015$1B+ pledgedAltman, Musk, Thiel, Hoffman, Livingston, AWS, Infosys, YC Research
MicrosoftJul 2019$1BMicrosoft (mostly Azure credits)
MicrosoftJan 2023~$10BMicrosoft
Series A/BVariousVariousThrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, others
Series EOct 2024$6.6BThrive Capital (led), Microsoft, NVIDIA, SoftBank
Series FMar 2025$40BSoftBank
Series GMar 2026$122BSoftBank-led. Largest single round in history.
Total raised~$180B[4][5]

Revenue History

YearRevenueKey Milestone
2022$28MPre-ChatGPT [5]
2023$2BChatGPT launched Nov 2022 [5]
2024$6BEnterprise growing [5]
2025$20B10x growth from 2023. $8B cash burn. [5]
2026 (projected)$29BIPO preparation underway [5]

The November 2023 Firing and Reinstatement

On November 17, 2023, the OpenAI board voted to fire Sam Altman as CEO, citing a loss of confidence in his candor. Ilya Sutskever had provided the board with two self-deleting documents: an “Altman memo” listing concerns about Altman’s pattern of lying and manipulation, and a “Brockman memo” regarding Brockman’s alleged bullying. [1][13][14]

Altman was reinstated on November 22, 2023 — five days later — before an independent investigation could be completed. Board members Helen Toner, Tasha McCauley, and Ilya Sutskever were removed. A new board was installed: Bret Taylor (chair), Larry Summers, and Adam D’Angelo (the only firing-vote member who remained). [1]

WilmerHale was engaged for an “independent investigation” of the integrity allegations as a condition of the board transition. Per reporting, it produced no written report — only oral briefings — and was described by six people involved as appearing “designed to limit transparency” and “a hunt for clear criminality” to acquit rather than inquire. [14]


Musk v. Altman

Elon Musk filed suit against Sam Altman and OpenAI in February 2024, alleging breach of the original nonprofit mission and self-dealing. The case went to jury trial beginning April 27, 2026 in Oakland (Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers). [14][16]

Key evidence entered at trial included Brockman’s private diary and internal emails. A trial exhibit identified nine companies where Altman held personal stakes that had business dealings with OpenAI, with a combined portfolio value exceeding $2 billion. Formation Bio (TrialSpark) appeared on this list with a $19 million stake. [6][16]

On May 18, 2026, the jury found in OpenAI’s favor, concluding that Musk’s claims were time-barred. The verdict removes a significant legal overhang ahead of OpenAI’s planned IPO. Musk has indicated he will appeal. [16][17]


Political Activity and Donations

DonorRecipientAmountDate
Sam AltmanTrump inaugural fund$1,000,000Dec 2024
Greg BrockmanMAGA Inc.$12,500,000Same day as a16z
Sam Altman + a16zLeading the Future PACCo-founded2024

Sam Altman’s 2016 blog post compared Trump to Hitler, invoked “Germany in the 1930s,” and called him a “demagogic hate-monger.” He later donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund, Brockman donated $25 million to MAGA Inc., and OpenAI signed military contracts and announced the $500 billion Stargate infrastructure project at the White House. [18][19]


Altman’s Personal Investment Conflicts

The Musk v. Altman trial exhibit identified companies where Altman holds personal stakes that conducted business with OpenAI. When asked about recusal for these deals, OpenAI has consistently stated that “COO Brad Lightcap led it” without confirming or denying that Altman recused. [6][15][20]

Known overlap companies include:

CompanyAltman StakeOpenAI Relationship
Reddit8.7% (~$1.3B)Data licensing deal for AI training [20][21]
Formation Bio (TrialSpark)$19MSanofi/OpenAI/Formation Bio AI collaboration [6][22]
Stripe$633MPayments infrastructure for ChatGPT [6]
Helion Energy$375M personalPower purchase agreement for data centers [6]
CerebrasUndisclosedChip partnership discussions [6]
Retro Biosciences$180M personalLongevity research — potential AI/bio intersection [6]

On April 3, 2026, Lightcap was moved from COO to “special projects” focused on “complex deals and investments across the company,” reporting directly to Altman. The recusal firewall moved closer to Altman, not further away. [15]


Key Acquisitions

AcquisitionDatePriceNotes
TBPNApr 2, 2026“Low hundreds of millions”Tech podcast show. Host John Coogan has 13-year pre-existing relationship with Altman (Soylent investment 2013). Placed in Strategy org under Chris Lehane. Fidji Simo championed acquisition, then took medical leave the following day. [23]
RocksetJun 2024~$100MDatabase company [1]
Multi2024UndisclosedScreen-sharing startup [1]

The OpenAI Startup Fund Anomaly

Sam Altman personally owned the $325 million OpenAI Startup Fund — a venture fund making investments in AI startups using OpenAI’s brand and relationships. Despite telling the Senate in May 2023 “I have no equity in OpenAI,” ownership of this fund was not disclosed in that framing. The fund was transferred to Ian Hathaway in April 2024 after the ownership structure drew scrutiny. [6][14]


Related Entities in the Altman Nonprofit Network

EntityAltman RoleChris Clark RoleConnection
OpenAICEOHead of Strategy (2016–2024)For-profit [1]
OpenResearchDirector, largest creditor ($14M+ loan)President / COONonprofit — $1M grant to TrialSpark [24]
UBI CharitableConnected via ClarkPresident / TreasurerNonprofit — received $10M from OpenAI + $15M anonymous DAF [7][24]

Chris Clark simultaneously served at all three entities. A single individual linking three Altman-connected organizations across nonprofit and for-profit lines. [7][24]


IPO Path

OpenAI is actively preparing for a 2026-2027 IPO. Cynthia Gaylor (former DocuSign CFO) was hired as first head of investor relations. The May 2026 Musk verdict removed the primary legal overhang. Internal targets include filing in H2 2026 with potential valuation up to $1 trillion. [5]


The OpenAI Foundation

When OpenAI converted to a PBC in October 2025, the original nonprofit entity was renamed the OpenAI Foundation. Per reporting, the Foundation retains approximately 26% equity (~$130B stake at $500B valuation), board appointment power, and a veto on new model releases via a Safety and Security Committee. The Foundation committed $25B to healthcare and disease research. The profit cap — originally 100x (2019), quietly reduced to “single digits” by 2021 — was removed entirely under the PBC structure. [2][3]

Both the California AG and Delaware AG reached safety agreements with OpenAI as conditions of the conversion. [2]

The Foundation will have its own profile page on this site. Its governance, funding, and relationship to the for-profit entity raise separate analytical questions about whether a 26% non-controlling stake with advisory powers constitutes meaningful nonprofit oversight of a $852 billion corporation.


Stargate and Military Contracts

Stargate ($500B announcement, January 2025): Announced at the White House with President Trump as a joint venture between OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank for AI data center infrastructure. Altman stood beside Trump and said “We wouldn’t be able to do this without you, Mr. President.” The joint venture stalled within weeks due to a three-way control fight. No staff hired, no data centers built as a unified entity. SoftBank’s $30 billion commitment was contingent on the for-profit conversion (completed October 2025). SoftBank scrambled to raise capital — selling its entire Nvidia stake ($5.83B) and T-Mobile shares. [25]

Pentagon Contract (February-March 2026): OpenAI signed an “all lawful purposes” military contract with the Department of Defense. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei’s leaked internal memo described OpenAI’s safety claims as “mendacious,” “safety theater,” and “straight up lies.” Former Uber executive Emil Michael: “I called Sam, and he was willing to jump.” OpenAI’s robotics chief resigned. ChatGPT uninstalls reportedly jumped 295% following the announcement. [26]

Warner Fundraiser (March 2025): Altman hosted a fundraiser for Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), demonstrating bipartisan donor positioning alongside the Trump relationship. [27]


Key Departures

NameRoleDepartedWhy It Matters
Elon MuskCo-founder, boardFeb 2018Cited Tesla AI conflict. Now suing for $130B+. [1][14]
Dario AmodeiVP of Research2020Founded Anthropic — direct competitor. Left over safety concerns and the for-profit direction. Confronted Altman about Microsoft “merge and assist” clause; Altman denied clause existed; Amodei read it aloud. [14]
Daniela AmodeiVP of Operations2020Co-founded Anthropic with Dario. [1]
Ilya SutskeverCo-founder, Chief Scientist2024Compiled the self-deleting memos that led to Altman’s firing. Founded SSI (Safe Superintelligence). Wedding officiant for Brockman — then adversary. [1][13]
Jan LeikeHead of Alignment2024Altman promised 20% of compute for alignment work. Actual allocation: 1-2%, on “the oldest cluster with the worst chips.” Murati told Leike to stop pressing — commitment “had never been realistic.” [14]
Mira MuratiCTO2024Altman told Murati the general counsel had approved GPT-4 safety review; GC replied “I don’t know where Sam got that impression.” [14]

Expanded Partnership and Deal Network

PartnerDealDateAltman Conflict?
Microsoft$1B (2019), $10B+ (2023), Azure cloudOngoingNadella personal alliance [1]
Sanofi + Formation BioMuse AI platform — drug developmentMay 2024Altman $19M stake in Formation Bio [6][22]
RedditData licensing for AI trainingMay 2024Altman 8.7% stake in Reddit [20][21]
AppleApple Intelligence integrationJun 2024Possibly Lightcap’s one independent deal — OpenAI now contesting Apple [15]
StripeAgentic Commerce Protocol — payments for ChatGPTSep 2025Altman $633M in Stripe [6]
ModernaChatGPT Enterprise deployment2024No direct Altman stake found — possibly genuine institutional deal [15]
Nvidia$100B “letter of intent” for 10GW deploymentSep 2025Deal broke down — Nvidia CFO: “no assurance any investment will be completed.” WSJ reported negotiations broke down Jan 2026. [25]
US Dept of Defense“All lawful purposes” military contractFeb-Mar 2026Followed $26M in Trump donations [26]

The Brockman Diary (Court Exhibit)

Greg Brockman’s private diary, unsealed as Exhibit A in Musk v. Altman, documents that OpenAI’s founders privately concluded they wanted a for-profit structure by November 2017 — two years before the 2019 for-profit announcement, and while the organization continued collecting donations as a nonprofit. [28]

Key entries:

  • September 2017: “This is the only chance we have to get out from Elon… Financially, what will take me to $1B?” [28]
  • November 2017: “cannot say that we are committed to the non-profit. don’t wanna say that we’re committed. if three months later we’re doing b-corp then it was a lie.” [28]
  • November 2017: “our conclusion is we truly want the b-corp.” [28]
  • November 2017: “it’d be wrong to steal the non-profit from [Musk]. to convert to a b-corp without him. that’d be pretty morally bankrupt.” [28]

Judge Gonzalez Rogers cited the diary in her January 15, 2026 ruling denying summary judgment: “ample evidence in the record” and “Brockman’s electronic notes could be read to suggest that Brockman intended to deceive.” [29]

Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott’s internal note, also in the court record: “I can’t imagine they funded an open effort to concentrate ML talent so that they could then go build a closed, for-profit thing on its back.” Microsoft invested billions anyway. [30]

Early 2019: Altman personally approached Reid Hoffman and Vinod Khosla. Both wrote checks on the explicit condition of creating a for-profit entity. The checks they wrote in 2019 funded a structural change that internal documents show was desired since November 2017. [31]


Microsoft / Nadella Dependency

Microsoft’s relationship with OpenAI creates a structural dependency that explains Nadella’s intervention during the November 2023 firing. Key data points: [34]

  • Microsoft holds 27% equity in OpenAI with NO formal board seat — observer only
  • OpenAI committed to $250B+ in Microsoft Azure cloud purchases
  • OpenAI represents approximately 45% of Microsoft’s future sales backlog (per Jefferies analyst)
  • Microsoft shares lost $357 billion in a single day partly from OpenAI dependency fears
  • Nadella learned of Altman’s firing “one minute before the public” and was “livid and blindsided”
  • Nadella hired Altman to Microsoft within 48 hours (before reinstatement ultimately occurred)
  • AGI clause paradox: if OpenAI achieves AGI, its technology licenses to Microsoft terminate — the closer OpenAI gets to its mission, the more likely it loses its biggest partner

Mustafa Suleyman (CEO of Microsoft AI) is building Microsoft’s in-house frontier models as a hedge against OpenAI dependency. His division exists because Microsoft cannot afford single-source dependency on a company whose CEO’s own board fired him for lack of candor. [34]


The Anthropic Contrast: Military Ethics

The sequence of the Pentagon deal is analytically significant: [32]

  1. Anthropic (founded by Altman’s former VP of Research who left over ethical concerns) negotiated a $200 million Pentagon contract
  2. Anthropic requested two red lines: no mass domestic surveillance of Americans, no fully autonomous weapons without human oversight
  3. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic a deadline to remove the restrictions
  4. Anthropic refused
  5. Hegseth designated Anthropic a “supply chain risk to national security” — a label historically reserved for foreign adversaries, never before applied to an American company
  6. That same night, OpenAI announced it had signed a deal with the DoD for “all lawful purposes” — essentially the deal Anthropic refused
  7. Altman later admitted it “looked opportunistic and sloppy” and that OpenAI “shouldn’t have rushed”

At an employee all-hands meeting, Altman told staff: “So maybe you think the Iran strike was good and the Venezuela invasion was bad. You don’t get to weigh in on that.” OpenAI explicitly surrendered operational control over how the military uses its AI. [32][35]

ChatGPT uninstalls jumped 295% after the Pentagon deal announcement. Anthropic climbed to #2 in the App Store. [32]


Safety Commitment Erosion Timeline

PromiseWhat Was Delivered
“Nonprofit dedicated to benefiting all humanity” (2015)For-profit PBC with 0% nonprofit control (2025)
100x profit cap (2019)Quietly reduced to “single digits” then removed entirely
“20% of compute for alignment” (2023 — Leike)Actual: 1-2%, on “the oldest cluster with the worst chips.” Murati: “had never been realistic”
Safety review for GPT-4 (Murati)Altman said GC approved it; GC: “I don’t know where Sam got that impression”
$1B AI safety prize (told to Berkeley student)“Seemed to waver” and “stopped talking about it.” Pivoted to in-house superalignment team (later disbanded)
Superalignment teamDisbanded after Leike and Sutskever departed
“Open” in OpenAIModels progressively closed; GPT-4 training data undisclosed
Independent investigation of Nov 2023 firing (WilmerHale)No written report. Oral briefings only. “Designed to limit transparency.”
Congressional testimony: “I have no equity in OpenAI” (May 2023)Personally owned $325M OpenAI Startup Fund. Transferred to Hathaway April 2024 — after testimony.

The COVID / OpenAI Connection

GPT-3 was released in June 2020 — the same month Project Covalence launched. On Sam Altman’s COVID deal flow spreadsheet (created February 2, 2020), MILA explicitly requested “Collaborators in Model-based RL from OpenAI” alongside “BSL4 lab collaborators to evaluate on live cultures.” A research organization was seeking OpenAI AI tools AND access to the highest-biosafety-level laboratories for live pathogen work — on Sam Altman’s personal COVID funding spreadsheet. [33]

OpenAI was classified as a YC Research project at this time. The CEO of OpenAI (Altman) created a COVID deal funnel that included requests for his own company’s AI tools combined with BSL4 laboratory access for dangerous pathogen research. The $1M OpenResearch grant to TrialSpark for Project Covalence flowed from the same individual’s nonprofit in the same year. [33]

— [Archive] Brockman diary entries (court exhibit, Musk v. Altman): “cannot say that we are committed to the non-profit” (Nov 2017); openai.com/index/the-truth-elon-left-out/ 29. [Archive] Judge Gonzalez Rogers ruling, Jan 15, 2026: “ample evidence in the record,” “Brockman’s electronic notes could be read to suggest that Brockman intended to deceive” 30. [Archive] Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott internal note (court exhibit): “I can’t imagine they funded an open effort to concentrate ML talent so that they could then go build a closed, for-profit thing on its back” 31. [Archive] AiCoin / Silicon Valley 101: Hoffman and Khosla funded the for-profit pivot on explicit condition of creating for-profit division 32. [Archive] Anthropic: Pentagon contract refused over autonomous weapons/mass surveillance red lines. Designated “supply chain risk” by Hegseth. Amodei staff memo: “mendacious,” “straight up lies” 33. [Archive] Sam Altman COVID spreadsheet: MILA entry requesting “Collaborators from OpenAI” + “BSL4 lab collaborators.” blog.samaltman.com/funding-for-covid-19-projects 34. [Archive] Jefferies analyst Brent Thill: OpenAI = 45% of Microsoft’s sales backlog. Microsoft shares lost $357B in single day partly from dependency fears 35. [Archive] Altman all-hands meeting quote: “So maybe you think the Iran strike was good and the Venezuela invasion was bad. You don’t get to weigh in on that”

  1. [Archive] Wikipedia: OpenAI: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenAI
  2. [Archive] OpenAI: PBC conversion announcement, October 2025
  3. [Archive] Bloomberg Tax analysis: nonprofit-to-for-profit conversion legal framework
  4. [Archive] Tracxn: OpenAI company profile 2026: https://tracxn.com/d/companies/openai/
  5. [Archive] Sacra: OpenAI revenue, valuation & funding: https://sacra.com/c/openai/
  6. [Archive] Reuters: “OpenAI chief Altman has over $2 billion stake in companies that dealt with OpenAI,” May 13, 2026
  7. [Archive] TechCrunch: “The nonprofits accelerating Sam Altman’s AI vision,” Feb 21, 2023: https://techcrunch.com/2023/02/21/the-non-profits-accelerating-sam-altmans-ai-vision/
  8. [Archive] YC Blog: “YC Research,” Oct 7, 2015: https://www.ycombinator.com/blog/tag/yc-research
  9. [Archive] YC Blog: “YC Changes,” Sep 13, 2016: https://www.ycombinator.com/blog/yc-changes
  10. [Archive] Greg Brockman profile — Stellar Development Foundation, Stripe CTO background, Patrick Collison introduction
  11. [Archive] Microsoft $1B investment announcement, July 2019
  12. [Archive] Public Citizen letters to California AG Rob Bonta re: OpenAI conversion premium
  13. [Archive] Shivon Zilis email March 25, 2018: “They have Adam D’Angelo as the potential fifth to take your place” — Altman selected D’Angelo as Musk’s board replacement
  14. [Archive] The New Yorker: Farrow/Marantz OpenAI investigation, April 2026
  15. [Archive] TechCrunch: “OpenAI executive shuffle includes new role for COO Brad Lightcap,” Apr 3, 2026: https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/03/openai-executive-shuffle-new-roles-coo-brad-lightcap-fidji-simo-kate-rouch/
  16. [Archive] Reuters: “OpenAI defeats Elon Musk’s lawsuit, removes obstacle to IPO,” May 18, 2026
  17. [Archive] Business Insider: “Sam Altman’s court appearance shines a light on his tech investments,” May 2026
  18. [Archive] AP News: “Sam Altman planned $1M donation to Trump inaugural fund,” Dec 13, 2024
  19. [Archive] blog.samaltman.com: “Trump” (2016 Hitler comparison)
  20. [Archive] TechCrunch: “Formation Bio raises $372M to boost drug development with AI,” Jun 26, 2024 — Lightcap/recusal language
  21. [Archive] OpenAI: “OpenAI and Reddit Partnership,” May 16, 2024
  22. [Archive] Sanofi: “Sanofi, Formation Bio and OpenAI announce first-in-class AI collaboration,” May 21, 2024
  23. [Archive] Multiple sources: TBPN acquisition — Coogan/Soylent relationship, Lehane placement, Simo medical leave
  24. [Archive] ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer: Open Research Lab Inc. (EIN 81-0861414) and UBI Charitable
  25. [Archive] Multiple sources: Stargate announcement January 2025; SoftBank conditional commitment; Nvidia deal breakdown January 2026
  26. [Archive] Multiple sources: Pentagon “all lawful purposes” contract; Amodei leaked memo (“mendacious,” “safety theater”); ChatGPT uninstalls 295%
  27. [Archive] Altman fundraiser for Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), March 2025

DISCLAIMER

This analysis does not constitute evidence of illegal action. The opinions expressed here are the professional opinions and analytical conclusions of the author, a published corporate ethics researcher and analyst specializing in business leadership ethics, governance structures, and nonprofit compliance. Readers are encouraged to examine the primary sources cited above and draw their own conclusions.


A conflict does not become less important because it was routed through a quieter entity. It becomes more important to map.


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