OpenAI skilled a safety breach in 2023 however didn’t disclose the incident outdoors the corporate, the New York Instances reported on July 4.
OpenAI executives allegedly disclosed the incident internally throughout an April 2023 assembly however didn’t reveal it publicly as a result of the attacker didn’t entry details about clients or companions.
Moreover, executives didn’t take into account the incident a nationwide safety risk as a result of they thought of the attacker a non-public particular person with out connection to a overseas authorities. They didn’t report the incident to the FBI or different regulation enforcement companies.
The attacker reportedly accessed OpenAI’s inside messaging techniques and stole particulars in regards to the agency’s AI expertise designs from worker conversations in a web based discussion board. They didn’t entry the techniques the place OpenAI “homes and builds its synthetic intelligence,” nor did they entry code.
The New York Instances cited two people aware of the matter as sources.
Ex-employee expressed concern
The New York Instances additionally referred to Leopold Aschenbrenner, a former OpenAI researcher who despatched a memo to OpenAI administrators after the incident and known as for measures to stop China and overseas nations from stealing firm secrets and techniques.
The New York Instances mentioned Aschenbrenner alluded to the incident on a latest podcast.
OpenAI consultant Liz Bourgeois mentioned the agency appreciated Aschenbrenner’s issues and expressed assist for secure AGI improvement however contested specifics. She mentioned:
“We disagree with lots of [Aschenbrenner’s claims] … This consists of his characterizations of our safety, notably this incident, which we addressed and shared with our board earlier than he joined the corporate.”
Aschenbrenner mentioned that OpenAI fired him for leaking different data and for political causes. Bourgeois mentioned Aschenbrenner’s issues didn’t result in his separation.
OpenAI head of safety Matt Knight emphasised the corporate’s safety commitments. He advised the New York Instances that the corporate “began investing in safety years earlier than ChatGPT.” He admitted AI improvement “comes with some dangers, and we have to determine these out.”
The New York Instances disclosed an obvious battle of curiosity by noting that it sued OpenAI and Microsoft over alleged copyright infringement of its content material. OpenAI believes the case is with out advantage.