As it prepares to transition from a nonprofit corporation to a for-profit, OpenAI says itโs convening a group of experts to โhelp OpenAIโs philanthropy understand the most urgent and intractable problems nonprofits face today.โ
This group, which OpenAI says will incorporate feedback from โleaders and communitiesโ in health, science, education, and public services, particularly within OpenAIโs home state of California, will be announced in April and submit insights to OpenAIโs board of directors in the next 90 days.
โ[T]he Board will consider these insights in its ongoing work to evolve the OpenAI nonprofit well before the end of 2025,โ OpenAI wrote in a blog post. โThe Board recognizes the importance of engaging with the philanthropic community and those closest to the work to help inform how OpenAIโs philanthropy can best deploy its potentially historic resources.โ
OpenAI was founded in 2015 as a nonprofit research lab. But as its experiments became increasingly capital intensive, itย createdย its current structure, taking on outside investments from VCs and companies,ย includingย Microsoft.
OpenAI today has a for-profit org controlled by a nonprofit, with a โcapped profitโ share for investors and employees. But as alluded to in the blog post, the companyโs intention is to transition its existing for-profit into a traditional corporation, with ordinary shares of stock. The nonprofit would receive billions of dollars to cede control.
The stakes are high for OpenAI to complete the conversion expeditiously. If it isnโt successful by the end of the year, at least one of its backers, SoftBank, could claw back billions of dollars in pledged capital.


