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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and chief scientist Jakub Pachocki published a blog post on Monday calling for the formation of an international organization to oversee frontier AI development, including the ability to slow progress “when needed” so that safety and societal resilience can keep pace. The call came as part of a broader vision statement announcing what Altman described as OpenAI’s “third phase,” published the same day the company confirmed it had confidentially filed for an initial public offering with the SEC.businessinsider
The timing is notable because it follows a similar statement from rival Anthropic, which on June 4 published a report urging AI labs to develop a coordinated and verifiable framework for pausing development if advanced systems begin to improve themselves faster than society can control. “We believe it would be good for the world to have the option to slow or temporarily pause frontier AI development to enable societal structures and alignment research to keep pace,” Anthropic wrote.yahoo
Anthropic warned that “recursive self-improvement” — where AI systems independently design, build, and train their successors — “could arrive sooner than many organizations are ready for,” and that without adequate safeguards, it could complicate human oversight of AI development. The company said any meaningful pause would require agreement from multiple leading labs across nations, particularly the United States and China, along with verification protocols.reuters
The convergence between the two companies is striking given their intense commercial rivalry. Both are preparing for public offerings, with Anthropic having filed its own S-1 in early June and OpenAI valued at more than $850 billion. Yet both are now publicly endorsing the idea that an external body should have the authority to throttle development of the most powerful AI systems.vktr
OpenAI’s push for an international governance body is not new — Altman first proposed an “IAEA for superintelligence” in 2023 — but the latest statement is more concrete in its framing. According to The Decoder, Altman and Pachocki called for “an international body that could slow frontier development if needed”. Business Insider reported that the pair stressed “the necessity for national and international collaboration, reiterating their proposal for a global organization dedicated to mitigating the risks associated with AI, with the capability to slow the development of advanced models when necessary”.nytimes
Whether the proposals amount to more than rhetoric remains to be seen. Neither company has committed to unilateral limits on its own development, and Anthropic acknowledged that if only one firm paused, competitors would surge ahead. The central question now is whether governments will take up the invitation — and whether the labs will accept genuine external authority over their work.yahoo