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Melinda French Gates has some words for CEOs cozying up to Trump

20 June 2025 at 19:33
Melinda French Gates
The billionaire philanthropist supported Vice President Kamala Harris during the 2024 election and has committed $1 billion to supporting women's issues and reproductive rights.

Reuters/Nic Bothma

  • Melinda French Gates sounded off on Silicon Valley's rightward shift.
  • "Many people who used to say one thing, have absolutely shifted," she said.
  • She added that tech billionaires shouldn't be "pivoting" based on the advice of comms people.

Melinda French Gates has some thoughts on Silicon Valley's rightward turn.

"What I have seen in the last six months to a year is many people who used to say one thing, have absolutely shifted," the billionaire philanthropist said in an interview with Bloomberg published this week.

French Gates also suggested that the tech billionaires who lined up behind President Donald Trump at his second inauguration weren't following their own values.

"Look, a democracy is made up by our beliefs and our investments and our values, and we, of all times right now, should be living those values out, not pivoting to what some comms person tells us is the right thing to do," she said.

It's not the first time French Gates has criticized tech billionaires in recent months.

In May, she said that Elon Musk β€” then the de facto head of the White House DOGE Office β€” should "go out and actually see what's going on in the world today" before shuttering the US Agency for International Development, or USAID.

The billionaire philanthropist supported Vice President Kamala Harris during the 2024 election and has committed $1 billion to supporting women's issues and reproductive rights.

"I really want to make sure that women can step into their full power and advance in society in both the US and globally," French Gates later said in the Bloomberg interview. "For a woman to have her full power, she needs to be able to voice what she thinks is true, make her own decisions about herself and her family, and have her own resources that she can decide where and how to spend them."

Read the original article on Business Insider

How business leaders like Jeff Bezos and Mark Cuban feel about work-life balance

7 July 2025 at 08:30
Those who want to take care of everything end up more susceptible to burnout.
Some business leaders see merit in work-life balance, while others hate the idea.

Getty Images

  • Many CEOs and business leaders have shared their thoughts on work-life balance.
  • Some support it while others call it a hindrance to success.
  • Here's what some of the biggest names in business make of work-life balance.

How do you juggle your personal life with your work?

Just about everyone has an opinion on work-life balance, including CEOs. Some business leaders see it as an important equilibrium to maintain, while some outright hate the idea.

Here are some top business execs' takes on work-life balance.

Mark Cuban says, "There is no balance" for incredibly ambitious people
Mark Cuban onstage during the 2025 SXSW Conference and Festival at Hilton Austin in Austin on March 10, 2025.
Mark Cuban says work-life balance isn't for everyone.

Julia Beverly/WireImage/Getty Images

On a recent episode of "The Playbook," a video series from Sports Illustrated and Entrepreneur, billionaire entrepreneur and former "Shark Tank" star Mark Cuban said, "There is no balance" for the most ambitious people.

"People are like, 'I need a work-life balance,'" he said. "If you want to work 9-to-5, you can have work-life balance. If you want to crush the game, whatever game you're in, there's somebody working 24 hours a day to kick your ass."

Leon Cooperman encourages young workers to "love what you do," but remember there's more to life than work
Leon Cooperman, chairman and CEO of  Omega Advisors, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York May 4, 2015. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Leon Cooperman, chairman and CEO of Omega Advisors, recently told Business Insider it's important to "love what you do."

Thomson Reuters

Billionaire investor and hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman said in a recent interview with Business Insider that there's more to life than hustling.

"I've been married 61 years to the same woman," he said, adding that his greatest success in life is that "my kids still come home."

"Love what you do β€” it's too demanding and difficult not to," the Wall Street veteran said. "Pursue it with a passion," he continued. Cooperman said that while he spent 25 years at Goldman Sachs, it never felt like work because he enjoyed it so much.

Jeff Bezos says work and life should form a circle, not a "balance"
Jeff Bezos speaks and motions with his hands
Jeff Bezos has called the phrase work-life balance "debilitating."

Alex Wong/Getty Images

In 2018, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said that workers should aim for work-life harmony, not "balance," at an event hosted by Business Insider's parent company, Axel Springer. Bezos also called the concept of work-life balance "debilitating" because it hints that there's a trade-off.

Bezos said that it's not a work-life balance, but "it's actually a circle."

Bezos said that if he feels happy at home, then it energizes him and makes him more productive at work, and vice versa.

Satya Nadella thinks you should focus on "work-life harmony"
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella speaking at a Microsoft event in Redmond, Washington.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella thinks people should strive for work-life "harmony."

Stephen Brashear via Getty Images

Microsoft's CEO also thinks that "work-life balance" isn't the goal. Instead, he says to focus on work-life "harmony." In 2019, he shared his thoughts with the Australian Financial Review, saying he used to think that he needed to balance relaxing and working. But he's since shifted his approach, aligning his "deep interests" with his work.

TIAA's CEO thinks the entire concept is a "lie"
Thasunda Brown Duckett speaks onstage during the 2018 Essence Festival presented by Coca-Cola at Ernest N. Morial Convention Center on July 7, 2018 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
TIAA's CEO says work-life balance is a "lie."

Paras Griffin/Getty Images for Essence

"Work-life balance is a lie," TIAA CEO Thasunda Brown Duckett said in a 2023 fireside chat. Brown Duckett has previously said she used to struggle with guilt and balancing her demanding job with being a mother.

Brown Duckett says that she views her life as a "portfolio," and that she takes time to perform different roles like mother, wife, and business executive. Though she may not always physically be with her children, she says she strives to be fully present during the time she is able to spend with them.

Ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt said work-life balance was why Google was behind in AI β€” then walked back the comments
Former chairman and CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt.
Former chairman and CEO of Google Eric Schmidt courted controversy with his remarks on work-life balance.

Shahar Azran/Getty Images

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt criticized Google's remote work policy and work-life balance during a lecture at Stanford University in 2024, saying these were contributing factors to the company trailing behind startups like OpenAI on artificial intelligence.

"Google decided that work-life balance and going home early and working from home was more important than winning," the former Google exec said in a recording of the lecture that was posted online in August. "And the reason the startups work is because the people work like hell."

He added that those looking to start successful companies today are "not going to let people work from home and only come in one day a week if you want to compete against the other startups."

After his comments gained attention, Schmidt walked back the comments.

"Eric misspoke about Google and their work hours and regrets his error," a spokesperson for Schmidt previously told Business Insider in an email.

Arianna Huffington says you shouldn't have to choose between work and life
Arianna Huffington speaks onstage during the TIME 100 Health Summit at Pier 17 on October 17, 2019 in New York City. She's holding a blue card and wearing a grey jacket.
Arianna Huffington prefers "work-life integration."

Brian Ach / Stringer / Getty

Arianna Huffington, founder of Thrive Global and HuffPost, told Great Place to Work that we shouldn't view productivity and relaxation as two opposing forces. Huffington said that when one area of your life improves, the other does as well.

Huffington said employees should focus more on "work-life integration" since "we bring our entire selves to work."

Still, Huffington believes that your personal life should always come first.

"While work is obviously important and can give us purpose and meaning in our lives, it shouldn't take the place of life," she said. "Work is a part of a thriving life, but life should come first."

Don't expect a work-life balance if you work for Elon Musk
Elon MuskΒ in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 21, 2025
Elon Musk is famous for demanding grueling work hours and personally sleeping overnight at the office.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Elon Musk is a known workaholic, and he expects those who work beneath him to be as well.

In 2022, just after Musk took ownership of X, formerly Twitter, he sent out an email to employees telling them to either dedicate their lives to working or leave the company. Musk reportedly made X employees work 84 hours a week. While some people think remote work improved their work-life balance, Musk has often criticized it and called it "morally wrong."

According to Walter Isaacson's biography of him, Musk would stay at the office overnight and shower at the YMCA when he joined the workforce in 1995. Musk has continued the habit while working at Tesla and buying Twitter, often spending the night at work.

In 2018, Musk said that he works 120 hours a week, amounting to 17 hours a day.

Jack Ma has also actively endorsed long work hours
Jack Ma, cofounder of tech giant Alibaba.
Jack Ma supports the "996" work culture popular in many workplaces in China.

Wang HE/Getty Images

One of China's richest men, Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma in 2019 expressed his support for the controversial "996" work system in many Chinese workplaces, which refers to working from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. He's called "996" culture a "huge blessing" for younger workers.

"Many companies and many people don't have the opportunity to work 996," he said in 2019. "If you don't work 996 when you are young, when can you ever work 996?"

"If you find a job you like, the 996 problem does not exist," he added. "If you're not passionate about it, every minute of going to work is a torment."

China's government called the grueling 996 schedule "illegal" in 2021, though it's believed to continue to be an expectation at many Chinese companies.

Skims cofounder Emma Grede says work-life balance "isn't your employer's responsibility"
Emma Grede sits on a couch
Emma Grede appears on an episode of the Today show in April 2023.

NBC/Getty Images

Emma Grede, a cofounder of Skims and Good American, said that work-life balance is a "personal responsibility" that you shouldn't expect your boss to solve.

"Work-life balance is your problem. It isn't your employer's responsibility," Grede said on the podcast "Diary of a CEO."

The entrepreneur said she doesn't micro-manage things if her employees aren't at their desks during the day, and there's flexibility to step away for a parent-teacher or occasional haircut.

But she also views it as a red flag if an interview candidate brings it up.

"When somebody talks to me about their work-life balance in an interview process, I'm like, 'Something is wrong with you,'" Grede said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The rise of OpenAI's billionaire CEO, Sam Altman

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
Sam Altman is the CEO of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.

picture alliance/dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

  • Before OpenAI, Altman was well-known in Silicon Valley as the president of Y Combinator.
  • The release of ChatGPT in 2022 catapulted Altman to worldwide fame.
  • Since then, he's led the charge to make OpenAI the first company to unleash the power of AGI.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman had an eventful 2024, and 2025 is shaping up to be just as big.

While the 39-year-old entrepreneur has been a household name in Silicon Valley for years now, the rest of the world has gotten to know him more recently through the success of OpenAI's AI chatbot, ChatGPT, which launched in 2022.

So far this year, Altman has tried to transform OpenAI into a for-profit company before backtracking in light of a lawsuit filed by OpenAI cofounder Elon Musk, while releasing the company's first "emotionally intelligent" model GPT-4.5, and planning for GPT-5.

Altman also unveiled a new partnership with longtime Apple designer Jony Ive, who, with his design firm LoveFrom, will take creative and design control of OpenAI. OpenAI is also acquiring Ive's hardware startup in a $6.5 billion deal.

This year also marked major milestones in Altman's personal life. Altman, who's married to Oliver Mulherin, announced the birth of his son in February.

In April 2024, Altman was added to Forbes' billionaires list. OpenAI launched GPT-4o β€” its newest large language model β€”the following month. In June, Apple CEO Tim Cook announced at Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference that the tech giant would partner with OpenAI to bring ChatGPT to iPhones.

Before the AI boom, Altman spent years as president of startup accelerator Y Combinator. He also owns stakes in Reddit, a nuclear fusion startup known as Helion, and other companies. In his free time, he races sports cars with his husband and preps for the apocalypse.

Here's a look at Altman's life and career so far.

Altman grew up in St. Louis and he was a computer whiz from a young age.
A view of st Louis with buildings and archway
Sam Altman is a Missouri native.

f11photo/Shutterstock

He learned how to program and take apart a Macintosh computer when he was 8 years old, according to The New Yorker. He attended John Burroughs School, a private, nonsectarian college-preparatory school in St. Louis.

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Altman told The New Yorker that having a Mac helped him with his sexuality
macintosh microsoft visitor center
Altman has been open about his sexuality since he was a teenager.

Matt Weinberger/Business Insider

"Growing up gay in the Midwest in the two-thousands was not the most awesome thing," he told The New Yorker. "And finding AOL chat rooms was transformative. Secrets are bad when you're eleven or twelve."

Altman came out as gay after a Christian group boycotted an assembly at his school that was about sexuality.

"What Sam did changed the school," his college counselor, Madelyn Gray, told The New Yorker. "It felt like someone had opened up a great big box full of all kinds of kids and let them out into the world."

Altman studied computer science at Stanford University before dropping out to start an app
Stanford University
Like many famous tech founders, Altman is a college dropout.

turtix/Shutterstock

The app shared a user's location with their friends. Loopt was part of the first group of eight companies at startup accelerator Y Combinator. Each startup got $6,000 per founder, and Loopt was in the same batch as Reddit, according to The Business of Business.

Loopt eventually reached a $175 million valuation
sam altman
Altman has been a tech founder since his early 20s.

Drew Angerer/Getty

The $43 million sale price was close to how much it had raised from investors, The Wall Street Journal reported. The company was acquired by Green Dot, a banking company known for prepaid cards.

One of Loopt's cofounders, Nick Sivo, and Altman dated for nine years, but they broke up after they sold the company.

After Loopt, Altman founded a venture fund called Hydrazine Capital, and raised $21 million.
Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, Palantir Technologies, and Founders Fund, holds hundred dollar bills as he speaks during the Bitcoin 2022 Conference at Miami Beach Convention Center on April 7, 2022 in Miami, Florida.
Peter Thiel has backed multiple companies founded by Altman.

Marco Bello/Getty Images

That included a large part of the $5 million he got from Loopt, and an investment from billionaire entrepreneur and venture capitalist Peter Thiel. Altman invested 75% of that moneyΒ into YC companies and led Reddit's Series B fundraising round.

He told The New Yorker, "You want to invest in messy, somewhat broken companies. You can treat the warts on top, and because of the warts, the company will be hugely underpriced."

In 2014, at the age of 28, Altman was chosen by Y Combinator founder Paul Graham to succeed him as president of the startup accelerator.
Sam Altman
Altman was a teacher and a major player in the startup world in 2014.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

While he was YC president, Altman taught a lecture series at Stanford called "How to Start a Startup." The next year, at 29, Altman was featured on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for venture capital.

After he became YC president, he wanted to let more science and engineering startups into each batch.
sam altman
Altman at the annual Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference in Idaho in 2016.

Drew Angerer/Getty

He chose a fission and a fusion startup for YC because he wanted to start a nuclear-energy company of his own. He invested his own money in both companies and served on their boards.

Mark Andreessen, cofounder of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, told The New Yorker, "Under Sam, the level of YC's ambition has gone up 10x."

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He finds interesting β€” and expensive β€” ways to spend his free time.
White Koenigsegg Regera on a track
The Koenigsegg Regera is a rare Swedish sports car that can cost nearly $5 million.

Martyn Lucy/Getty Images

In April (the same month he made Forbes' billionaire list), Altman was spotted in Napa, California, driving an ultra-rare Swedish supercar. The Koenigsegg Regera is seriously fast, able to go from zero to 250 miles per hour in less than 30 seconds. Only 80 of these cars are known to exist, and they can cost up to $4.65 million.Β 

He once told two YC founders that he likes racing cars and had five, including two McLarens and an old Tesla, according to The New Yorker. He's said he likes racing cars and renting planes to fly all over California.

Separately, he told the founders of the startup Shypmate that, "I prep for survival," and warned of either a "lethal synthetic virus," AI attacking humans, or nuclear war.

"I try not to think about it too much," Altman told the founders in 2016. "But I have guns, gold, potassium iodide, antibiotics, batteries, water, gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force, and a big patch of land in Big Sur I can fly to."

Altman's mom is a dermatologist and told The New Yorker, "Sam does keep an awful lot tied up inside. He'll call and say he has a headache β€” and he'll have Googled it, so there's some cyber-chondria in there, too. I have to reassure him that he doesn't have meningitis or lymphoma, that it's just stress."

Altman has a brother, Jack, who is a cofounder and CEO at Lattice, an employee management platform.
jack altman and his wife, julia, standing in front of a blurred palm tree in a park
Julia and Jack Altman live in the Mission District of San Francisco.

San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images/Contributor

Along with their brother Max, the Altmans launched a fund in 2020 called Apollo that is focused on funding "moonshot" companies. They're startups that are financially risky but could potentially pay off with a breakthrough development.

In 2015, Altman cofounded OpenAI with Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX at the time.
L-R) Tesla Motors CEO and Product Architect Elon Musk and Y Combinator President Sam Altman speak onstage during "What Will They Think of Next? Talking About Innovation" at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on October 6, 2015 in San Francisco, California.
Elon Musk and Sam Altman speak onstage in San Francisco.

Michael Kovac/Getty Images for Vanity Fair

Their goal for the nonprofit artificial intelligence company was to make sure AI doesn't wipe out humans.

"We discussed what is the best thing we can do to ensure the future is good?" Musk told The New York Times in 2015. "We could sit on the sidelines or we can encourage regulatory oversight, or we could participate with the right structure with people who care deeply about developing A.I. in a way that is safe and is beneficial to humanity."

Some of Silicon Valley's most prominent names pledged $1 billion to OpenAI, including Reid Hoffman, the cofounder of LinkedIn, and Thiel.

Altman stepped down as YC president in March 2019 to focus on OpenAI. He stayed in a chairman role at the accelerator.
sam altman
Altman went all in on OpenAI in 2019.

@sama

At a StrictlyVC event in 2019, Altman was asked how OpenAI planned to make a profit, and he said the "honest answer is we have no idea."

Altman said OpenAI had "never made any revenue" and that it had "no current plans to make revenue."Β 

"We have no idea how we may one day generate revenue," he said at the time, according to TechCrunch.

Altman became CEO of OpenAI in May 2019 after it turned away from being a nonprofit company into a "capped profit" corporation.
Sam Altman
OpenAI changed from nonprofit status in 2019.

Skye Gould/Business Insider

"We want to increase our ability to raise capital while still serving our mission, and no pre-existing legal structure we know of strikes the right balance," OpenAI said on its blog. "Our solution is to create OpenAI LP as a hybrid of a for-profit and nonprofit β€” which we are calling a 'capped-profit' company."

OpenAI received a $1 billion investment from Microsoft in 2019.
Sam Altman
Altman in 2014 in New York City.

Brian Ach/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Altman flew to Seattle to meet with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, where he demonstrated OpenAI's AI models for him, The Wall Street Journal reported. The pair announced their business partnership on LinkedIn.

Current and former insiders at OpenAI told Fortune that after Altman took over as CEO, and after the investment from Microsoft, the company started focusing more on developing natural language processing.
Sam Altman
The company shifted its focus after Altman took over.

Brian Ach/Getty

Altman and OpenAI's former chief scientist, Ilya Sutskever, said the move to focus on large language models was the best way for the company to reach artificial general intelligence, or AGI, a system that has broad human-level cognitive abilities.Β 

In 2021, Altman and cofounders Alex Blania and Max Novendstern launched a global cryptocurrency project called Worldcoin.
Worldcoin founders Sam Altman and Alex Blania
Worldcoin founders Alex Blania and Sam Altman.

Marc Olivier Le Blanc/Worldcoin

The company, now just called World, aims to give everyone in the world access to crypto by scanning their iris with an orb. In January, World said it had reached 1 million people and has onboarded over 150,000 first-time crypto users.

Under Altman's tenure as CEO, OpenAI released popular generative AI tools to the public, including DALL-E and ChatGPT.
Screenshot of Dall-E webpage
A screenshot of a Dall-E webpage.

OpenAI

Both DALL-E and ChatGPT are known as "generative" AI, meaning the bot creates its own artwork and text based on information it is fed.

After ChatGPT was released on November 30, Altman tweeted that it had reached over 1 million users in five days.

ChatGPT was made public so OpenAI could use feedback from users to improve the bot.
An image of a phone with ChatGPT and OpenAI's logo visible.
ChatGPT's success was nearly instant.

Getty Images

A few days after its launch, Altman said that it "is incredibly limited, but good enough at some things to create a misleading impression of greatness." Altman postedΒ that ChatGPT was "great" for "fun creative inspiration," but "not such a good idea" to look up facts.

ChatGPT then launched a paid version of ChatGPT called "ChatGPT Professional" to give better access to the bot. In December, Altman posted that OpenAI "will have to monetize it somehow at some point; the compute costs are eye-watering."

ChatGPT now has multiple models at different price levels.

In January 2023, Microsoft announced it was making another "multibillion-dollar" investment in OpenAI.
Y Combinator President Sam Altman
OpenAI's partnership with Microsoft further solidified its success.

David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The value of Microsoft's investment was worth $10 billion. Before Microsoft's investment, other venture capitalists wanted to buy shares from OpenAI employees in a tender offer that valued the company at around $29 billion.

Altman is still interested in nuclear fusion and invested $375 million in Helion Energy in 2022.
sam altman wearing a black t shirt, black jacket, grey pants and sunglasses
Altman said he's "super excited" about Helion's future.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

"Helion is more than an investment to me," Altman told TechCrunch. "It's the other thing beside OpenAI that I spend a lot of time on. I'm just super excited about what's going to happen there."

He told TechCrunch that he's "happy there's a fusion race," to build a low-cost fusion energy system that can eventually power the Earth.

OpenAI launched its subscription plan for ChatGPT Plus in 2023.
OpenAI's ChatGPT
Users can pay for more features on ChatGPT.

FLORENCE LO/Reuters

People who pay $20 a month for ChatGPT Plus get benefits such as access to the app even when traffic is high, faster responses from the bot, and first access to new features and ChatGPT improvements.

Altman wrote that OpenAI's mission is to make sure AGI "benefits all of humanity."
OpenAI's Sam Altman
Artificial general intelligence is a big talking point for Altman.

JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images

"If AGI is successfully created, this technology could help us elevate humanity by increasing abundance, turbocharging the global economy, and aiding in the discovery of new scientific knowledge that changes the limits of possibility," Altman wrote on OpenAI's blog.

Despite its potential, Altman said artificial general intelligence comes with "serious risk of misuse, drastic accidents, and societal disruption." But instead of stopping its development, Altman said "society and the developers of AGI have to figure out how to get it right."

Altman went on to share the principles that OpenAI "care about most," including "the benefits of, access to, and governance of AGI to be widely and fairly shared."

Altman said he and OpenAI are "a little bit scared" of AI's potential.
person holding phone with the word 'gpt-4' on it
GPT-4 (Generative Pre-trained Transformer 4) is a multimodal large language model from Open AI, a predecessor to GPT-4o.

Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

In an interview with ABC News, Altman said he thinks "people should be happy that we're a little bit scared" of generative AI systems as they develop.

Altman said he doesn't think AI systems should only be developed in a lab.

"You've got to get these products out into the world and make contact with reality, make our mistakes while the stakes are low," he said.

In April 2023, OpenAI announced the option to turn off chat history in ChatGPT.
chatgpt on phone
Over the years, people have expressed concerns about the privacy policies of AI chatbots.

Getty

In a blog post, the company said it hoped the option to turn off chat history "provides an easier way to manage your data than our existing opt-out process."

When a user turns off their chat history, new conversations will be kept for 30 days for OpenAI to review them for abuse, then are permanently deleted.

In his first appearance before Congress, Altman told a Senate panel there should be a government agency to grant licenses to companies working on advanced AI.
Sam Altman testifying before Congress in May 2023
Sam Altman testified before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology, and the Law in 2023.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Altman told lawmakers there should be an agency that grants licenses for companies that are working on AI models "above a certain scale of capabilities." He also said the agency should be able to revoke licenses from companies that don't follow safety rules.

"I think if this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong," Altman said. "And we want to be vocal about that, we want to work with the government to prevent that from happening."

OpenAI launched a ChatGPT app for iPhones and Android users in 2023.
ChatGPT iPhone app
OpenAI released its official ChatGPT app to iPhone users.

Insider

The app, which is free, can answer text-based and spoken questions using Whisper, another OpenAI product that is a speech-recognition model. Users who have a subscription to ChatGPT Plus can also access it through the app.

Altman met with leaders in Europe to discuss AI regulations and said OpenAI has "no plans to leave" the EU.
Photo of Sam Altman speaking at the Senate hearing on Tuesday.
Altman believes AI could surpass humanity in most domains in the next 10 years.

Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters.

At the start of his trip, Altman told reporters in London that he was concerned about the EU's proposed AI Act, which focuses on regulating AI and protecting Europeans from AI risks.

"The details really matter," Altman said, according to the Financial Times. "We will try to comply, but if we can't comply, we will cease operating."

However, he shared on X later in the week that OpenAI is "excited to continue to operate here and of course have no plans to leave."

In an October 2023 interview, Altman expressed "deep misgivings" about people befriending AI.
Sam Altman
Altman has been vocal about his stance on AI's place in the future.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Altman made it clear that he doesn't believe humans should try to be friends with AI in an interview during The Wall Street Journal's Tech Live event.

"I personally really have deep misgivings about this vision of the future where everyone is super close to AI friends, and not more so with their human friends," Altman said.

OpenAI shocked tech fans by announcing that Altman would no longer be the company's CEO.
Sam Altman and Mira Murati
Altman and CTO Mira Murati, who briefly took over as interim CEO after his ousting.

PATRICK T. FALLON/Getty Images

In November, the OpenAI board of directors announced that Altman would be stepping down from his role as CEO and leaving the board, "effective immediately."

In a blog post, the board said it "no longer has confidence in his ability to continue leading OpenAI," and added that Altman was "not consistently candid in his communications."

"We are grateful for Sam's many contributions to the founding and growth of OpenAI," a statement from OpenAI's board says. "At the same time, we believe new leadership is necessary as we move forward."

Altman issued his own statement via a post on X.

"i loved my time at openai. it was transformative for me personally, and hopefully the world a little bit. most of all i loved working with such talented people," Altman wrote.

He added: "will have more to say about what's next later."

Days after the ouster, Altman returned as CEO.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
Altman returned to OpenAI days after his dismissal was announced.

Markus Schreiber/AP

After a chaotic weekend, Altman and OpenAI announced that he would return to the tech company as CEO.

"We have reached an agreement in principle for Sam Altman to return to OpenAI as CEO with a new initial board of Bret Taylor (Chair), Larry Summers, and Adam D'Angelo," the company wrote on X.

In January 2024, Altman confirmed he had married his partner Oliver Mulherin.
Sam Altman and his boyfriend
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (R) with his husband Oliver Mulherin (L) at a White House dinner.

JULIA NIKHINSON/Getty

Altman married his partner Mulherin in January 2024.

An attendee of the wedding confirmed to Business Insider that the pictures the couple shared weren't AI-generated. His husband is an Australian software engineer who previously worked at Meta, according to his LinkedIn profile.

OpenAI launched its text-to-video model Sora.
Screenshot from Sora-made video
Sora is still being tested, but OpenAI and Sam Altman are showing off what it can do.

OpenAI

In February 2024, OpenAI unveiled Sora to the public. The program β€” named after the Japanese word for "sky" β€” created up to one-minute-long videos from text prompts.Β 

"We're teaching AI to understand and simulate the physical world in motion, with the goal of training models that help people solve problems that require real-world interaction," OpenAI wrote in Sora's announcement.

Altman and his husband signed the Giving Pledge in 2024.
Sam Altman and Oliver Mulherin
Sam Altman and Oliver Mulherin have pledged to give away most of their wealth.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Time

A few weeks after Forbes declared Altman a billionaire, he and his partner signed the Giving Pledge, vowing to give away most of their fortune.

"We would not be making this pledge if it weren't for the hard work, brilliance, generosity, and dedication to improve the world of many people that built the scaffolding of society that let us get here," the pledge letter read.

They continued: "There is nothing we can do except feel immense gratitude and commit to pay it forward, and do what we can to build the scaffolding up a little higher."

OpenAI introduces GPT-4o.
OpenAI CTO Mira Murati
OpenAI's CTO was the main speaker at the Spring Update in May.

OpenAI

During its "Spring Update" on May 13, 2024, OpenAI announced GPT-4o, an updated version of its large language model that powers ChatGPT. OpenAI CTO Mira Murati made the announcement, and Altman didn't make an appearance despite actively promoting the event on X.Β 

Altman might've been absent from the presentation, but the demonstrations of ChatGPT's voice and video capabilities created buzz online. It also led to Altman and his company being called out by actor Scarlett Johansson, who alleged that the OpenAI chatbot Sky's voice sounded "eerily similar" to her own after she declined a partnership.

Altman's post on X referencing a movie in which Johansson voices someone's virtual girlfriend was quickly called into question, and the company soon said that it would not move forward with the voice heard in the demo.

Apple announced a partnership with OpenAI at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June.
Sam Altman and Tim Cook
OpenAI's Sam Altman and Apple's Tim Cook announced a deal at WWDC 2024.

Getty Images

After much debate about how it would enter the AI arms race, Apple announced at WWDC 2024 that it would partner with OpenAI to close the gap between it and its rivals.

Although Bloomberg reported that Apple isn't paying OpenAI in cash, the tech titan's solid installed base of over two billion users means more people may use ChatGPT if it comes integrated with Siri. According to the presentation, Siri will be able to handle more complex requests with help from ChatGPT.

Altman was spotted attending WWDC the day the partnership was announced and speaking to high-ranking Apple employees ahead of the keynote.Β 

Altman might finally get equity as OpenAI considers restructuring.
Sam ALtman
Sam Altman

Riddhi Kanetkar / Business Insider

Altman confirmed reports that OpenAI was planning a corporate restructuring during a talk at Italian Tech Week in September 2024.Β 

"Our board has been thinking about that for almost a year, independently, as we think about what it takes to get to our next stage," Altman said. "I think this is just about people being ready for new chapters of their lives and a new generation of leadership."

As part of those changes, Altman might finally get equity in OpenAI, which is now worth about $157 billion after it closed its most recent, $6.6 billion funding round.Β 

In October 2024, Altman weighed in on how close he is to achieving OpenAI's mission.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

At OpenAI's developer conference, Dev Day, Altman said o1, OpenAI's latest set of AI models, which it says has "reasoning" abilities, represented a breakthrough toward artificial general intelligence.Β 

While Altman said he believes AGI β€” a still hypothetical form of AI that can solve any task a human can β€” is still a ways away, there will be "very steep" progress over the next two years.

OpenAI announced in January that it'd be involved in a $500 billion project called Stargate.
Donald Trump, Masayoshi Son, and Larry Ellison standing next to Sam Altman
President Donald Trump, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, and Oracle founder Larry Ellison at the Stargate press conference.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

On January 21, Altman joined Oracle CTO Larry Ellison, President Donald Trump, and SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son to announce a partnership to fund a $500 billion investment in US AI. The companies would form Stargate, a project that seeks to build US AI infrastructure and create jobs.

"Together these world-leading technology giants are announcing the formation of Stargate," Trump said, adding: "Put that name down in your books, because I think you're going to hear a lot about it."

He declined a $97.4 billion bid to buy OpenAI from a group led by Elon Musk.
Elon Musk and Sam Altman
Musk and Altman have had a rocky relationship since he left OpenAI.

Steve Granitz, Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Getty Images

Though the pair founded OpenAI together, Altman's relationship with Musk has become increasingly tense over the years. Musk offered to run OpenAI, but his proposal was rejected, Semafor reported in 2023. He departed OpenAI in 2018 and went on to start xAI.

Since then, they've had heated exchanges, shared words of appreciation, and entered a legal battle. Musk sued Altman and OpenAI in March 2024, alleging the company violated its founding principles.

In an August 2024 lawsuit, Musk claimed he was "deceived" into cofounding OpenAI.

The most recent development in their feud is a $97.4 billion bid to buy the AI company by a group led by Musk. Altman declined, telling Sky News reporters at an AI summit in Paris, "The company is not for sale, neither is the mission."

He announced the birth of his first child in February.

welcome to the world, little guy!

he came early and is going to be in the nicu for awhile. he is doing well and it’s really nice to be in a little bubble taking care of him.

i have never felt such love. pic.twitter.com/wFF2FkKiMU

β€” Sam Altman (@sama) February 22, 2025

On February 22, Altman announced the birth of his son on social media. Altman said the newborn will be in the neonatal intensive care unit, or NICU, which offers medical treatment after birth, "for awhile."

"i have never felt such love," Altman said in his post.

Days later, OpenAI released GPT-4.5.
Sam Altman
Sam Altman posted a roadmap for GPT-4.5 and GPT-5 on X.

JOEL SAGET / AFP

Altman introduced the new model in a post on X, where he described it as "the first model that feels like talking to a thoughtful person." He added that the model will be "giant" and "expensive," and Altman said it offers a "different kind of intelligence and there's a magic to it."

OpenAI released GPT-4.5 to pro tier users who pay $200 a month and developers in the API with plans to offer it to ChatGPT Plus, Team, and Edu users the following week.

OpenAI backtracks on its plans to go for-profit

In a blog post on May 5, OpenAI said it "was founded as a nonprofit, and is today overseen and controlled by that nonprofit. Going forward, it will continue to be overseen and controlled by that nonprofit."

It added that the "for-profit LLC, which has been under the nonprofit since 2019, will transition to a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC)β€”a purpose-driven company structure that has to consider the interests of both shareholders and the mission."

OpenAI also said that the nonprofit will continue to control the PBC and remain its largest shareholder. The new PBC will maintain OpenAI's same mission.

OpenAI acquires the startup io from ex-Apple designer Jony Ive in a $6.5 billion deal.
Jony Ive and Sam Altman
Jony Ive and Sam Altman.

LoveFrom

Altman announced on May 21 that OpenAI was buying a hardware startup called io from Jony Ive, the former Apple exec who led the design of the iPhone and other iconic products. The deal is valued at nearly $6.5 billion, a spokesperson confirmed to BI.

Altman also noted that Ive, and his design firm LoveFrom, would be taking control of creative and design at OpenAI β€” a partnership that has been two years in the making.

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It's official: Greg Abel will be Berkshire Hathaway's next CEO

greg abel
The Berkshire Hathaway board has voted to replace Warren Buffett with Greg Abel.

Berkshire Hathaway Energy

  • Warren Buffett said on Saturday he will step down as the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway by year's end.
  • The board has voted to make Greg Abel, now a vice chair at the company, its CEO and president.
  • Abel is expected to maintain Buffett's existing investment approach.

Hours after Warren Buffett stunned the crowd at Berkshire Hathaway's annual shareholder meeting by announcing that he'd step down at the end of the year, its board voted unanimously for Greg Abel to replace him.

Buffett β€”Β who is 94 and has been the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway for 55 years β€” will remain as chairman of the board of directors, according to a press release. Greg Abel will become the new CEO and president as of January 1, 2026.

"I think the time has arrived where Greg should become the chief executive of the company at year end," Buffett told the audience on Saturday, referring to Abel, one of his top hands.

Abel, 62, has been Berkshire Hathaway's vice chair of non-insurance operations since 2018. He's also chair of Berkshire Hathaway Energy, which Buffett hailed as one of the conglomerate's four "jewels" in his annual shareholder letter in 2021, the same year Buffett first tapped Abel as his successor.

While Buffett's approval was a major plus, the company's board of directors was tasked with confirming his successor, and did so on Sunday.

Investors and shareholders expect that Abel will maintain Berkshire Hathaway's investment philosophy. He told shareholders at this weekend's meeting that he would start by maintaining the company's "fortress of a balance sheet," which allows it to make large investments without relying on banks, Barron's reported.

Abel is known, however, for having a more hands-on management style than Buffett.

He was estimated by Forbes to be worth $484 million in 2021. In 2022, he sold his 1% stake in the company's Berkshire Hathaway Energy unit for $870 million.

Abel has risen through the ranks with a persistent focus on energy.

The Canadian native played hockey in his early years and attended the University of Alberta. He graduated in 1984 with a degree in commerce.

He joined PwC after graduation and quickly moved on to a small company called CalEnergy. In 1999, CalEnergy acquired MidAmerican Energy and adopted its name. That same year, Berkshire Hathaway bought a controlling interest in MidAmerican Energy. Abel took over the reins of MidAmerican in 2008 β€” renamed Berkshire Hathaway Energy in 2014 β€” and helmed it until 2018.

He's also served on the board of several major companies, including Kraft Heinz, and has been affiliated with organizations and institutions like the Mid-Iowa Council Boy Scouts of America, Drake University, American Football Coaches Foundation, and the Horatio Alger Association.

He lives in Des Moines, Iowa. Those who've spotted him at a hockey rink in town, watching his son practice, say he comes across as a "regular guy," the Des Moines Register reported.

Buffett also has a reputation as a folksy and down-to-earth person, living in Omaha, Nebraska.

At Berkshire Hathaway, succession doesn't seem to be just about handing over a job. With the title, Buffett said he's passing down traditions β€” like writing letters β€” and a mindset, too.

In Berkshire Hathaway's 2024 annual report, Buffett wrote, "At 94, it won't be long before Greg Abel replaces me as CEO and will be writing the annual letters. Greg shares the Berkshire creed that a 'report' is what a Berkshire CEO annually owes to owners.

"And he also understands that if you start fooling your shareholders, you will soon believe your own baloney and be fooling yourself as well."

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