OpenAI, Anthropic and the governance risks of ‘self-appointed mission guardians’
OpenAI and Anthropic have attracted billions in capital by promising to build transformative AI safely, but a new legal analysis argues their governance models may carry a risk investors and boards should take seriously. At the heart of the debate is whether unelected directors can be trusted to override shareholder interests in pursuit of a broader mission without creating deeper accountability problems.
Drawing on comparisons with Ben & Jerry’s, the piece asks what happens when companies give ‘mission guardians’ lasting power to balance profit, safety and public-interest goals. If authority is separated from investors, who ultimately checks decisions that could affect both enterprise value and the mission itself?
This piece explores why the governance architecture of leading AI companies matters far beyond Silicon Valley, how mission-led structures can create built-in tension between fiduciary expectations and social objectives, as well as why directors, investors and governance teams should pay closer attention to how accountability is designed.
Read more here to see why AI governance may depend as much on-board design and accountability as on technical safety ambitions.
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