Sam Altman , CEO of OpenAI , affirmed the company’s commitment to staying in California after resolving a regulatory dispute with California Attorney General Rob Bonta. In a post on X, Altman said the company had spoken with the Attorney General two weeks earlier and made clear it would not follow other tech firms that threaten to relocate when facing scrutiny. The agreement clears the path for OpenAI’s restructuring into a public-benefit corporation and enables Microsoft to move ahead with a 27% ownership stake, marking a major step in the company’s governance evolution.
OpenAI’s deal with California
OpenAI’s transformation from a non-profit organisation into a public-benefit corporation has required careful scrutiny from regulators. The company was originally founded to ensure that artificial intelligence would be developed safely and for the benefit of humanity, without commercial motives dominating its mission.
As OpenAI expanded into building powerful AI systems like ChatGPT , the scale of investment and computing resources needed pushed it toward a hybrid structure that could attract private capital. Regulators therefore stepped in to ensure that the non-profit’s charitable assets, research and mission were not improperly transferred into a purely profit-driven enterprise.
With state approval now formalised, there is greater clarity on how OpenAI must balance commercial opportunity with its legal responsibility to operate in the public interest.
Microsoft’s significant investment—now around 27%—plays a central role in OpenAI’s future. The deal provides essential cloud infrastructure, funding and global distribution to scale advanced AI tools, while tying OpenAI’s success to a major technology partner.
In exchange, Microsoft integrates OpenAI models deeply into its own products and services, strengthening its competitiveness in the rapidly evolving AI landscape. Together, the restructuring and partnership create a model intended to accelerate innovation while maintaining accountability, potentially shaping how future high-impact AI firms are governed.
Why Altman emphasised California
Altman’s statement differentiates OpenAI from tech giants that have adopted an adversarial approach to state regulators. Rather than signalling the threat of an exit, he publicly stressed that California remains OpenAI’s home and that the company wanted to “figure this out” collaboratively.
The move highlights California’s continued importance as the centre of US artificial intelligence development, and reinforces that companies operating in high-risk, high-impact technologies must expect active regulatory engagement.
OpenAI’s deal with California
OpenAI’s transformation from a non-profit organisation into a public-benefit corporation has required careful scrutiny from regulators. The company was originally founded to ensure that artificial intelligence would be developed safely and for the benefit of humanity, without commercial motives dominating its mission.
As OpenAI expanded into building powerful AI systems like ChatGPT , the scale of investment and computing resources needed pushed it toward a hybrid structure that could attract private capital. Regulators therefore stepped in to ensure that the non-profit’s charitable assets, research and mission were not improperly transferred into a purely profit-driven enterprise.
With state approval now formalised, there is greater clarity on how OpenAI must balance commercial opportunity with its legal responsibility to operate in the public interest.
California is my home, and I love it here, and when I talked to Attorney General Bonta two weeks ago I made clear that we were not going to do what those other companies do and threaten to leave if sued.
— Sam Altman (@sama) October 28, 2025
We really wanted to figure this out and are really happy about where it all…
Microsoft’s significant investment—now around 27%—plays a central role in OpenAI’s future. The deal provides essential cloud infrastructure, funding and global distribution to scale advanced AI tools, while tying OpenAI’s success to a major technology partner.
In exchange, Microsoft integrates OpenAI models deeply into its own products and services, strengthening its competitiveness in the rapidly evolving AI landscape. Together, the restructuring and partnership create a model intended to accelerate innovation while maintaining accountability, potentially shaping how future high-impact AI firms are governed.
Why Altman emphasised California
Altman’s statement differentiates OpenAI from tech giants that have adopted an adversarial approach to state regulators. Rather than signalling the threat of an exit, he publicly stressed that California remains OpenAI’s home and that the company wanted to “figure this out” collaboratively.
The move highlights California’s continued importance as the centre of US artificial intelligence development, and reinforces that companies operating in high-risk, high-impact technologies must expect active regulatory engagement.
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