OpenAI did not reveal security breach in 2023 – NYT

Share This Post

OpenAI experienced a security breach in 2023 but did not disclose the incident outside the company, the New York Times reported on July 4.

OpenAI executives allegedly disclosed the incident internally during an April 2023 meeting but did not reveal it publicly because the attacker did not access information about customers or partners.

Furthermore, executives did not consider the incident a national security threat because they considered the attacker a private individual without connection to a foreign government. They did not report the incident to the FBI or other law enforcement agencies.

The attacker reportedly accessed OpenAI’s internal messaging systems and stole details about the firm’s AI technology designs from employee conversations in an online forum. They did not access the systems where OpenAI “houses and builds its artificial intelligence,” nor did they access code.

The New York Times cited two individuals familiar with the matter as sources.

Ex-employee expressed concern

The New York Times also referred to Leopold Aschenbrenner, a former OpenAI researcher who sent a memo to OpenAI directors after the incident and called for measures to prevent China and foreign countries from stealing company secrets.

The New York Times said Aschenbrenner alluded to the incident on a recent podcast.

OpenAI representative Liz Bourgeois said the firm appreciated Aschenbrenner’s concerns and expressed support for safe AGI development but contested specifics. She said:

“We disagree with many of [Aschenbrenner’s claims] … This includes his characterizations of our security, notably this incident, which we addressed and shared with our board before he joined the company.”

Aschenbrenner said that OpenAI fired him for leaking other information and for political reasons. Bourgeois said Aschenbrenner’s concerns did not lead to his separation.

OpenAI head of security Matt Knight emphasized the company’s security commitments. He told the New York Times that the company “started investing in security years before ChatGPT.” He admitted AI development “comes with some risks, and we need to figure those out.”

The New York Times disclosed an apparent conflict of interest by noting that it sued OpenAI and Microsoft over alleged copyright infringement of its content. OpenAI believes the case is without merit.

The post OpenAI did not reveal security breach in 2023 – NYT appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

RENDER: ‘Uptober’ May Come Late As Token Loses 13% 

Render (RENDER) underperforms in the face of the market’s current pullback, resulting to the token experiencing a strong pullback in the past couple of days According to CoinGecko, RENDER fell by

BBVA to Launch Visa-Backed Euro-Pegged Stablecoin Next Year

BBVA, one of Spain’s largest financial institutions, has announced plans to launch its stablecoin product by 2025 The organization is currently in the sandbox stages and will be developed in

Polymarket bettors favor Len Sassaman in HBO’s potential Satoshi Nakamoto reveal

Bettors on Polymarket, a decentralized prediction platform, have placed Len Sassaman as the leading candidate for HBO’s upcoming reveal of Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, Satoshi

‘FLOKI Master Plan’: Crypto Analyst Predicts 2,000% Jump For The Shiba Inu Competitor

Despite being in a downward trend all week, Floki (FLOKI) remains significantly bullish, according to a crypto analyst Basing his analysis on similarities between past price movements, the analyst

BTC’s Future in Focus: 4 Key Factors That Could Drive or Stall Its 2024 Rally

At press time, the crypto economy is cruising at $214 trillion, following a modest uptick Friday morning There are 88 days left in the year, 32 days until the 2024 US Election Day, and 34 days until

Shiba Inu Burn Rate: Here’s How Much SHIB Was Burned In September

The Shiba Inu burn tracking website Shibburn recently revealed how many SHIB tokens were burned in September The burn rate witnessed an impressive surge compared to the number of tokens burned the