OpenAI has taken a significant step toward reshaping its corporate structure. The AI company announced it has reached a nonbinding agreement with Microsoft, its largest investor, to transform its for-profit arm into a public benefit corporation (PBC). If regulators give the green light, the move could pave the way for OpenAI to attract more investors and eventually pursue a public listing.

A Shift in Structure

According to OpenAI board chairman Bret Taylor, the nonprofit entity that currently governs the organization will remain intact and continue overseeing the company’s operations. As part of the arrangement, the nonprofit will secure a stake in the new PBC, with an estimated value of over $100 billion. While the detailed terms have not been revealed, the plan underscores a major shift in how OpenAI balances its mission and business ambitions.

Both companies described the agreement as a memorandum of understanding (MOU)—not legally binding, but a clear roadmap for finalizing a full contract. “We are actively working to finalize contractual terms in a definitive agreement,” they said in a joint statement.

Months of Negotiation

This announcement follows months of discussions between Microsoft and OpenAI, which had previously clashed over governance and control. OpenAI’s nonprofit board structure is unusual among startups and was at the center of the dramatic ouster—and quick reinstatement—of CEO Sam Altman in 2023. That same governance model still exists today.

Under the current partnership, Microsoft provides cloud services and enjoys preferred access to OpenAI’s technologies. However, as ChatGPT’s popularity has exploded, OpenAI has sought to diversify its partnerships. It recently signed a $300 billion contract with Oracle to run over five years starting in 2027 and is collaborating with SoftBank on a large-scale data center project.

Regulatory and Legal Challenges

The transition plan will need approval from regulators in California and Delaware, where OpenAI is incorporated. At the same time, the company faces pressure from critics. Lawsuits, including one from Elon Musk, argue that OpenAI’s shift toward a for-profit model betrays its original nonprofit mission. Musk even submitted an unsolicited $97 billion takeover bid, which OpenAI rejected.

Nonprofit groups like Encode and The Midas Project have also raised concerns, claiming the move undermines OpenAI’s pledge to build AI that benefits humanity. OpenAI, in turn, has accused these organizations of being influenced by rivals such as Musk and Meta, a claim they strongly deny.

Despite these tensions, OpenAI’s new agreement with Microsoft signals a clear path forward: aligning its mission-driven governance with the financial flexibility of a PBC.

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