Recently, OpenAI employees signed an open letter demanding that the board reinstate Sam Altman, add other board members (giving some names of people allied with Altman), and resign, or else they would quit and follow Altman to Microsoft.
Following those demands would've put the entire organization under the control of 1 person with no accountability to anyone. That doesn't seem like what OpenAI employees wanted to be the case, unless they're dumber than I thought. So, why did they sign? Here are some possible reasons that come to mind:
- Altman is just really likeable for people like them - they just like him.
- They felt a sense of injustice and outrage over the CEO being fired that they'd never felt over lower-level employees being fired.
- They were hired or otherwise rewarded by Altman and thus loyal to him personally.
- They believed Altman was more ideologically aligned with them than any likely replacement CEO (including Emmett Shear) would be.
- They felt their profit shares would be worth more with Altman leading the company.
- They were socially pressured by people with strong views from (3) or (4) or (5).
- They were afraid the company would implode and they'd lose their job, and wanted the option of getting hired at a new group in Microsoft, and the risk of signing seemed low once enough other people already signed.
- They were afraid Altman would return as CEO and fire or otherwise punish them if they hadn't signed.
- Something else?
Which of those reasons do you think drove people signing that letter, and why do you think so?
I have no data on OpenAI situation, but #8 has crossed my mind. (It reminded of the communist elections where the Party got 99% approval.) If Sam Altman returns -- and if he is the kind of person some people describe him as -- you do not want to be one of the few who didn't sign the public letter calling for his return. That would be like putting your name on a public short list of people who don't like the boss.
Of course, #5 is also likely. But notice that the entire point of having the board was to prevent the #5 reasoning to rule the company. Which means that ~all OpenAI employees oppose the OpenAI Charter. Which means that Sam Altman won the revolution (by strategically employing/keeping the kind of people who oppose the company Charter) long before the board even noticed that it started.
(I find it amusing that the document that people in communist Czechoslovakia were afraid not to sign publicly, so that they don't lose their jobs, was called... Anticharter.)
The rules may be nice, but they are not going to enforce themselves.
Many communist countries had freedom of speech and freedom of religion in their constitutions. But those constitutions were never meant to be taken seriously, they were just PR documents for the naive Western journalists to quote from.