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OpenAI Foundation Governance Paradox

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LLM Summary:The OpenAI Foundation holds Class N shares giving it exclusive power to appoint/remove all OpenAI Group PBC board members. However, 7 of 8 Foundation board members also serve on the for-profit board—creating a structure where the nonprofit 'oversees' itself. This governance theater protects against external capture (hostile takeovers) but provides zero protection against internal capture (board prioritizing profit over mission). Board members are incentivized to publicly signal they care more about the company than the Foundation, since their careers and finances depend on stock appreciation. Post-IPO, public shareholders will buy economic exposure to a company controlled by a nonprofit—an unprecedented structure where fiduciary duty to mission could theoretically override shareholder value.
AspectAssessment
Governance StructureNonprofit holds Class N shares with exclusive board appointment power
Same-Board Problem7 of 8 Foundation directors also serve on for-profit board
External Capture ProtectionStrong—Class N shares cannot be purchased
Internal Capture ProtectionNone—same people control both entities
Board Incentive AlignmentStrongly favor stock appreciation over charitable deployment
Post-IPO ImplicationsPublic shareholders get economic rights, zero governance power

The OpenAI Foundation holds Class N Common Stock giving it exclusive power to appoint and remove all board members of OpenAI Group PBC. On paper, this means a nonprofit dedicated to “beneficial AI for humanity” controls one of the world’s most valuable technology companies.

In practice, the same 8 people who run the for-profit company also govern the nonprofit that supposedly oversees it.

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The result: The Foundation’s “oversight” of OpenAI consists of the company’s leadership overseeing themselves.

Asset TypeWhat It IsWhat It Does
Class N Common StockSpecial governance sharesExclusive power to appoint/remove all PBC board members
26% Equity StakeOrdinary shares worth ≈$130BFinancial interest only (dividends, sale proceeds)

These are legally separate. The Foundation could theoretically:

  • Sell its entire 26% equity stake → Still controls the company via Class N
  • Give away the equity to charity → Still controls the company via Class N
  • Have the equity drop to zero → Still controls the company via Class N

OpenAI’s lawyers designed this structure to:

GoalHow Class N Achieves It
Prevent hostile takeoversCan’t buy governance—only Class N holders can appoint board
Enable capital raisingInvestors get economic upside without governance power
Prepare for IPOPublic shareholders buy cash flows, not control
Maintain “nonprofit control” narrativeFoundation technically controls company

The structure is borrowed from dual-class stock designs at Google, Meta, and Snap—but adapted to a nonprofit wrapper.

Only the OpenAI Foundation (the nonprofit entity) can hold Class N shares. Not Sam Altman personally. Not individual board members. The organization holds them.

Class N Shares ──held by──► OpenAI Foundation (entity)
governed by
Foundation Board (8 people)
7 of whom also serve on
OpenAI Group PBC Board

Could the board give them away? The Foundation board could theoretically relinquish Class N shares, but:

  • They have no incentive to do so
  • It would require board approval (same people benefiting from control)
  • CA AG oversight creates some friction

The structure ensures the nonprofit cannot be forced to give up control—only the nonprofit can choose to relinquish it.

MemberFoundation BoardPBC BoardVoting on Both?
Bret Taylor (Chair)Yes
Sam Altman (CEO)Yes
Adam D’AngeloYes
Sue Desmond-HellmannYes
Paul NakasoneYes
Adebayo OgunlesiYes
Nicole SeligmanYes
Zico KolterNon-voting observerNo

7 of 8 Foundation board members have voting power over both the nonprofit mission AND the for-profit company.

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The Foundation’s governance power is real in a legal sense—but exercised by people with strong incentives to prioritize the company’s commercial success.

Risk TypeDefinitionStructure’s ProtectionEffectiveness
External captureHostile shareholders take controlClass N shares can’t be bought; governance stays with FoundationStrong
Internal captureBoard prioritizes profit over missionNone—same people control both entitiesNone

The structure is clever legal engineering against outsiders. It does nothing against insiders.

If you put genuinely charity-minded people on the Foundation board—people who take “beneficial AI for humanity” literally—they might:

ActionProblem for OpenAI
Sell the $130B stake and donate itLoses the asset, creates pressure to actually do philanthropy
Block profit-maximizing decisions”This deployment timeline is unsafe, we’re using our veto”
Demand safety over speed”Slow down development until interpretability catches up”
Question racing dynamics”Is building AGI fastest actually beneficial?”
Exercise real oversightAsk hard questions the PBC board doesn’t want asked
Board MemberBackgroundCharity-Minded?
Bret TaylorSalesforce CEO, tech executiveNo—business mindset
Adam D’AngeloQuora CEO, Facebook early employeeNo—tech founder mindset
Sue Desmond-HellmannGates Foundation, Genentech CEOMaybe—but pharma/tech background
Zico KolterCMU professor, AI researcherMaybe—but academic, not activist
Paul NakasoneNSA director, generalNo—national security mindset
Adebayo OgunlesiPrivate equity, infrastructure investingNo—finance mindset
Nicole SeligmanSony legal, Jenner & BlockNo—corporate lawyer
Sam AltmanOpenAI CEOObviously not

Zero effective altruists. Zero nonprofit veterans whose primary identity is “I give away money to help humanity.”

A genuinely charity-minded board might look at the $130B stake and say:

“We should liquidate this over 10 years and fund AI safety research at 100 independent organizations.”

The current board will never do this. The structure isn’t a bug—it’s a feature.

Board Members’ Incentive to Signal Business Focus

Section titled “Board Members’ Incentive to Signal Business Focus”

If you’re a board member sitting on both the Foundation and the PBC, your personal interests require signaling:

InterestRequired Signal
Stock appreciation”I’m business-focused, growth-oriented”
Investor confidence”The nonprofit won’t interfere with operations”
Employee retention”Your equity will be worth something”
IPO success”This is a real company, not a charity project”
Future board seats”I’m a serious business person”

What you do NOT want to signal: “I take the charitable mission so seriously that I might block profitable decisions.”

SignalWhat It Tells Investors
Board full of CEOs, generals, private equity”These are business operators, not philanthropists”
Bret Taylor at Davos talking about “AI bubble” risks”I think like a finance person, not a missionary”
Emphasizing “Public Benefit Corporation” over “nonprofit-controlled""We’re a company that does good, not a charity that runs a company”
$50M initial donation (0.04% of assets)“Philanthropy is a footnote, not the focus”
RSP loosened before major releases”Commercial timelines matter more than safety theater”

There’s likely an unspoken agreement among board members:

“We all know the Foundation technically controls the company. We all know we’re supposed to prioritize the mission. But we also all know that if anyone actually does that, they’ll tank the stock, anger investors, and never serve on another board again. So let’s just… not.”

This is reinforced by:

  • Social proof: Everyone else on the board is business-minded
  • Selection bias: Charity-minded people weren’t invited
  • Career incentives: Being “difficult” about mission = reputation damage
  • Financial incentives: Everyone benefits from stock appreciation

The Foundation’s control is supposed to be the point—the thing that makes OpenAI different, the reason the nonprofit structure was preserved.

But everyone involved is incentivized to signal that the control is nominal, won’t be exercised, and shouldn’t worry investors.

The structure exists to say “a nonprofit controls this company.” The people exist to say “but don’t worry, we won’t act like it.”

Post-IPO: Nonprofit-Controlled Public Company

Section titled “Post-IPO: Nonprofit-Controlled Public Company”

When OpenAI goes public (projected 2026-2027), the structure will remain:

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StakeholderWhat They GetWhat They Don’t Get
Public shareholdersEconomic exposure, dividends, stock appreciationBoard voting rights, governance say
Microsoft (27%)Same as public—money, no votesBoard seats, veto power
Foundation (26%)Money AND 100% governance controlNothing—they have everything
CompanyControl MechanismPublic Shareholder Voting
MetaZuckerberg holds 55%+ voting via supervoting sharesLimited
GoogleFounders hold Class B (10x voting power)Limited
SnapPublic shares have zero votesNone
OpenAINonprofit holds Class N (100% board control)None

OpenAI is more extreme—the controlling entity is a nonprofit with a stated mission that could theoretically conflict with shareholder value.

  1. They already did: SoftBank, Microsoft, Thrive invested billions with no governance rights
  2. Growth story: If you believe OpenAI will 10x, governance doesn’t matter
  3. Trust in management: Investors bet on Altman, not the structure
  4. Precedent: Tech dual-class structures are normalized
Normal Dual-ClassOpenAI Structure
Founder controls companyNonprofit controls company
Founder’s interest = stock priceFoundation’s interest = “beneficial AI” (undefined)
Founder can be sued for fiduciary breach to shareholdersFoundation’s fiduciary duty is to mission, not shareholders
Clear profit motivePBC must balance profit with public benefit

The pitch to public investors:

“Buy our stock. A nonprofit with a vague mission controls the company. The nonprofit board is mostly the same people running the company. Trust us.”

IssueRisk Level
Proxy advisors (ISS, Glass Lewis) recommend againstMedium
Institutional investors demand governance reformsMedium
SEC scrutiny of nonprofit control disclosureLow-Medium
Investor lawsuits if Foundation decisions hurt stockHigh (post-IPO)
Index fund eligibility affected by governanceLow

The likely outcome: OpenAI IPOs anyway, investors buy anyway because AI hype, and the governance weirdness only matters if something goes wrong.

Anthropic’s Alternative: Long-Term Benefit Trust

Section titled “Anthropic’s Alternative: Long-Term Benefit Trust”

Anthropic’s Long-Term Benefit Trust attempts to solve the same problem differently:

AspectOpenAI FoundationAnthropic LTBT
Control mechanismClass N shares (direct)Shareholder pledge (contractual)
Financial stake$130B equity (26%)None—pure governance
Board overlap7 of 8 overlap with companyDesigned to be independent
Conflict of interestFoundation benefits from stock appreciationTrust has no financial stake

Anthropic’s structure attempts to separate governance from financial interest. OpenAI’s structure combines them in the same people.

What A Better OpenAI Structure Could Look Like

Section titled “What A Better OpenAI Structure Could Look Like”
ElementCurrentBetter Design
Class N holdersFoundation board (same as company)Fully independent trustees
Trustee qualificationsTech/finance executivesNonprofit leaders, ethicists, safety researchers
Financial stakeTrustees benefit from stock appreciationTrustees have no OpenAI financial interest
Term limitsNoneRotating terms, mandatory refreshment
SelectionSelf-perpetuating (board picks successors)Independent nominating process

OpenAI chose not to build this separation. The current structure maximizes control retention while claiming nonprofit oversight.

The current situation has no clean exit. The same people who benefit from OpenAI’s commercial success control the entity meant to hold them accountable. Any solution needs to break this link.

PathProbabilityQuality of Outcome
Status quo continues40%Poor—governance theater persists
Incremental pressure yields modest reforms35%Mediocre—slightly better but unchanged fundamentally
Major forcing event (lawsuit/scandal)20%Could be good or chaotic
Voluntary restructuring to real independence5%Best outcome but least likely

The Musk lawsuit is currently the primary external forcing function:

OutcomeWhat Happens
Large judgmentFoundation loses assets; precedent deters similar structures
Settlement with governance termsMusk takes cash + Foundation agrees to reforms
OpenAI winsValidates the structure; status quo preserved

Irony: The best accountability mechanism may be a billionaire suing to recover his donation—and keeping it.

The Attorney General could demand:

  • Real board independence (separate people)
  • Minimum philanthropic deployment rates
  • Independent audits of mission alignment

Why it hasn’t happened: Political constraints, limited resources, OpenAI employs thousands in CA, no precedent at this scale.

Post-IPO, new tools become available:

  • Proxy advisory firms recommend against governance structure
  • Institutional investors demand reforms for ESG compliance
  • Shareholder proposals create annual votes (even if non-binding)
  • Media scrutiny increases with public company disclosure

Limitation: Public shareholders have no actual voting power. Pressure is reputational only.

Current board is self-perpetuating—they pick successors. But:

  • Members age out, resign (Summers already gone due to Epstein scandal)
  • Future scandals could force departures
  • External pressure could change selection criteria

Best case: Over 10-15 years, gradual shift toward independent directors. Realistic case: Replacements are similar tech/finance people.

If OpenAI causes or enables serious harm:

  • Regulatory intervention becomes politically viable
  • Board members face personal liability
  • Public pressure demands structural reform

The dark path: Real accountability only comes after something goes badly wrong.

InterventionCostPotential Impact
Support EyesOnOpenAI coalition$50-100KSustained AG pressure
Fund investigative journalism$100-200KDocument governance failures
Academic research on governance$50-100KEstablish this as case study
Prepare for IPO pressure coordination$200-500KInstitutional investor alignment

The structure was designed to resist change from within. Change will have to come from external pressure, legal action, or crisis.

  1. Class N shares are real legal power—the Foundation genuinely controls board appointments

  2. Same-board overlap nullifies the oversight—the people being “overseen” are doing the overseeing

  3. Board composition ensures no charity-minded disruption—all business/finance/tech executives

  4. Signaling incentives push away from mission—board members are rewarded for prioritizing company over Foundation

  5. Post-IPO will be unprecedented—public shareholders buying into a nonprofit-controlled company

  6. The structure is governance theater—protects against external capture, enables internal capture

  7. This was a choice—OpenAI could have created real independence, as Anthropic attempted

  • OpenAI Foundation — Assets, spending projections, philanthropic activities
  • Musk v. OpenAI Lawsuit — Legal challenge to the restructuring
  • Long-Term Benefit Trust — Anthropic’s contrasting governance approach
  • OpenAI — The for-profit company
  • Anthropic — Competitor with different governance structure