
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!
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?
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.
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.
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.
Sam initially didn’t want to talk for the book, but eventually did. Why? Presumably because he must think he might have lost a tiny battle, but won the fight. If you remember, back in March of 2023, a letter signed by over 1000 influential people within the AI community calling for the slowdown of AI was signed, notably by some of his competitors like Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak. It’s safe to say that not only AI did not slow down one bit, but its development has been one of the most, if not the most, important tech stories of the past 2-3 years. The industry as a whole had raised over 150 billions since, and 20 billions alone in the first 2 months of 2025. Elon Musk of course has gone on to found X-AI around the same time as signing the letter (lol), and acquired X (formerly Twitter) a year later, in March of 2025, presumably to help a dying company with his new lucrative and definitely overvalued company. So - it’s 1-0 for the accelerationists against the safety first people in AI.
Sam wants to be remembered as one of the greats At the time of his firing, not many people know about Sam, except for a niche community within tech. And now, everybody does. According to Keach Hagey herself, Sam wants to matter. He thinks of himself as one of the great men of history, right alongside Edison and Oppenheimer. In the book, she described a meeting in which Sam mentioned to her that it’s too early to tell the story of OpenAI. So in a way, he thinks that his involvement with OpenAI or even AI as a whole is not all of his story. His ambition goes far beyond AI - he’s thinking at the scale of national identity and economic systems, as hinted in his America Equity essay here.
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.