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Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command Army Gen. Paul Nakasone testifying before a House committee in January. Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

OpenAI said on Thursday that it is adding former NSA head and retired Gen. Paul Nakasone to its board of directors as well as its newly formed Safety and Security Committee.

Why it matters: OpenAI is looking to convince skeptics that it is taking sufficient steps to ensure its models are safe as it works toward its goal of super intelligence.

What they're saying: "Artificial Intelligence has the potential to have huge positive impacts on people's lives, but it can only meet this potential if these innovations are securely built and deployed," OpenAI board chair Bret Taylor said in a statement.

The other side: Several former high-ranking OpenAI employees have criticized the company for prioritizing speed over safety, including Jan Leike, who helped lead the company's long-term safety work, dubbed "superalignment."

Jun 12, 2024 - Technology

Microsoft "accepts responsibility" for issues raised in hack report

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Brad Smith, vice chair and president at Microsoft, testifies at a Senate Judiciary privacy subcommittee in September. Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

Microsoft president Brad Smith will tell lawmakers on Capitol Hill Thursday that the company is responsible for "each and every one of the issues" that a government advisory board uncovered while investigating a recent China hack, according to prepared remarks.

Why it matters: Lawmakers, administration officials and regulators have started to lose trust in the tech giant's ability to secure its products after a series of nation-state cyberattacks.

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