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The Breakpoint: OpenAI Rewrites Its Future with Microsoft

The Breakpoint: OpenAI Rewrites Its Future with Microsoft

For nearly a decade, OpenAI has lived inside a paradox. It was founded in 2015 as a nonprofit meant to “benefit all of humanity,” funded by a handful of Silicon Valley billionaires who pitched it as an antidote to corporate AI dominance. But to build frontier models like GPT-4 and GPT-5, it needed billions in capital, access to the best chips on the planet, and a business model that didn’t scare investors away. The compromise was awkward: a nonprofit parent perched on top of a “capped-profit” subsidiary, trying to blend charity and startup logic into one legal structure.

This week, that paradox finally cracked. OpenAI and Microsoft signed a non-binding agreement that allows OpenAI to restructure into a conventional for-profit company. The nonprofit parent will walk away with a $100 billion equity stake, instantly converting its mission into hard financial value. And for the first time, OpenAI has a governance model Wall Street can understand, underwrite, and—eventually—IPO.

It isn’t just a governance tweak. It’s the moment OpenAI steps out of its half-charity chrysalis and into the capital markets as a fully fledged contender.

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