- A critical New Yorker profile revived long-standing concerns about Sam Altman’s leadership and trustworthiness.
- There were two separate attempted attacks on Altman’s home over the weekend.
- Altman responded with an intense and personal blog post calling for a reduction in rhetoric around AI.
For Sam Altman, the weekend was a series of chaotic and, at times, dangerous crises. OpenAI CEO had faced questions after deep discussion New Yorker investigation that led to an intense and emotional response in a blog post, all in the midst of two attacks on his home in approximately forty-eight hours.
He New Yorker The story drew on more than 100 interviews and documents to review the events surrounding Altman’s brief ouster from OpenAI in 2023. It portrays Altman as an executive surrounded by doubts about his honesty and commitment to safety over power.
For Altman, whose public image has long depended on appearing like a calm adult in front of squabbling children, the article threatened something more serious than embarrassment. It sharpened a broader backlash already brewing around OpenAI, including criticism from AI safety advocates, artists, publishers, regulators and rivals who argue that the company has become too powerful and too slippery.
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An attack and angry words.
Then, at 4 a.m. on Friday, police reported that someone threw a Molotov cocktail at Altman’s home and fled, appearing at OpenAI’s headquarters and threatening to burn the building down. Court documents say he carried writings opposing artificial intelligence and warning of “our imminent extinction.”
Altman responded not with a corporate statement but with a very personal blog post. She posted a family photo and wrote: “I hope the images have power. Normally we try to be pretty private, but in this case I’m sharing a photo in the hopes that it might deter the next person from throwing a Molotov cocktail at our house, no matter what they think of me.” It was a surprising move by a CEO who typically prefers polished futurism to crude confession.
He also made it clear that he saw a connection between the surrounding rhetoric and the violence. “Words have power too,” Altman wrote. “There was an incendiary article about me a few days ago.” He said he had initially dismissed the suggestion that the story appeared “at a time of great anxiety about AI” and had made things “more dangerous” for him. “Now I am awake in the middle of the night and angry,” he wrote, “and thinking that I have underestimated the power of words and narratives.”
Apology and counterpoints
Altman didn’t just lash out. He mixed the grievance with the confession.
“I’m not proud of being conflict averse,” he wrote. “I am not proud that I mishandled a conflict with our previous board that led to a huge disaster for the company,” he wrote. “I’ve made many other mistakes along OpenAI’s crazy journey; I’m an imperfect person at the center of an exceptionally complex situation.” He also wrote: “I am sorry to the people I have hurt and I wish I had learned more and faster.”
He presented himself as fallible and indispensable. He insisted that “fear and anxiety about AI are justified” and argued that power over AI “cannot be too concentrated,” even though OpenAI remains one of the companies doing the most to concentrate it.
Then on Sunday morning, before the story could cool down, the weekend took a turn for the worse. San Francisco police responded to reports of possible shots fired near Altman’s home and arrested two people. No injuries were reported, but the symbolism was impossible to ignore. A tech leader who argued that the temperature around AI had become dangerous suddenly had multiple violent incidents at his home and office.
Backlash everywhere
Altman now faces angry tirades from multiple directions, although many of them have nothing directly to do with the violence. Questions of trust, accountability, and the amount of power now found within a handful of AI companies are ripe. Public sentiment around AI is no longer just argumentative or academic.
Altman closed his post with a line that seems almost glib in context. “We should reduce the rhetoric and tactics and try to have fewer explosions in fewer homes, figuratively and literally.”
In a matter of days, Sam Altman’s role went from a familiar lightning rod of the tech world to something more exposed and uncomfortable. The criticism surrounding it isn’t going away, nor is the broader anxiety about the AI that fuels it. What changed over the weekend is how visible and volatile that tension became, spreading beyond articles and arguments into something harder to contain. Altman may have called for a cooldown in rhetoric, but the moment suggests that the conversation around him and the technology he represents are becoming louder, sharper, and harder to control.
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