Mira Murati, the former head of Openai’s technology, who unexpectedly left the company in September, helped find a new artificial intelligence boot called Machines Lab, adding the wave of new companies formed in the race to lead AI
The Thinking Machines laboratory aims to “make AI systems broadly understandable, adaptable and generally capable”, according to a blog position from the new company. She said she would freely share her technologies with external researchers and companies, a practice known as an “open source”.
The machine thinking laboratory refused to say if it had raised money.
Ms Murati, 36, was among OpenAi’s top executives and researchers who abandoned the company after the surprise of the executive, leading her, Sam Altman, in November 2023 and her rehabilitation five days later. Some of them had clashed with Mr Altman over the direction of Openai and his philosophy over AI, a strong technology that has implications for jobs and society.
Other former Openai executives, including co -founder and former lead scientist Ilya Sutskever, have since created their own AI companies. Their newly formed businesses, along with giant companies such as Google, Meta and Microsoft, are part of the world’s world -building AI technologies.
(The New York Times has sued Openai and her partner, Microsoft, in support of the copyright violation of the AI ​​-related news content.)
Openai occupied the world’s imagination in late 2022 with the liberation of Chatgpt, an online chatbot that could answer questions, write down terms documents, create a computer code and mimic human conversation. Mr Altman became a face of the AI ​​movement.
But in November 2023, four members of the Openai Board of Directors removed him, saying that they could not trust him with the company’s plan for a day to create a machine that can do anything the human brain can do. Ms Murati, who joined Openai in 2018, was named to drive the company after Mr Altman’s removal, but rejected the role two days later. He stayed in Openai after Mr Altman’s expansion.
The Times reported last year that Ms Murati had written a private note to Mr Altman in the months before his abolition, asking questions about his administration and sharing the note with the Openai Board of Directors. A lawyer for Ms Murati denied claims at that time.
When she left Openai, Ms Murati said she was moving away to “create the time and space to do my own exploration”. He did not provide details.