OpenAI's Pentagon Deal Isn't Surprising. That's the Problem.
The company that once said it wouldn't build weapons is now working with the Department of War. We've seen this script before.
Crédito da imagem: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
So when exactly did "beneficial AI for all of humanity" start including classified military contracts?
If you've been paying attention to OpenAI's trajectory over the past two years, the company's newly announced agreement with the Department of War shouldn't shock you. But that's sort of the point, isn't it? The slow normalization of something that would have been unthinkable in 2020 is precisely how these things always go. I've seen this movie before, back when Google quietly dropped "Don't Be Evil" and when every social media company discovered that user data was actually a product, not a byproduct.
The OpenAI blog post announcing the deal is a masterclass in corporate positioning. They outline "safety red lines" and "legal protections" and explain how their AI systems will be deployed in "classified environments." All very reassuring language! The kind of language you use when you know a significant portion of your user base is going to be uncomfortable with what you're telling them.
The money problem
Let's be clear about something: OpenAI is burning through cash at a rate that would make a 1999 dot-com blush. The pivot from nonprofit research lab to capped-profit company to, well, whatever they are now, has always been about one thing. Money. Lots of it. And government contracts, particularly defense contracts, are the most reliable revenue stream in American capitalism. They don't cancel subscriptions. They don't churn. They just keep paying, year after year, as long as you keep delivering.
The company's broader government push is laid out in their OpenAI for Government initiative, which they describe as bringing "best-in-class technology" to public servants. That's the sanitized version. The reality is that once you're in the government sales pipeline, the defense and intelligence communities come knocking. That's not conspiracy thinking, that's just how federal procurement works. Ask anyone who's sold software to the GSA.
What I find genuinely interesting (and by interesting I mean concerning) is the speed of this evolution. OpenAI published their technical goals stating their mission is to "build safe AI" and ensure benefits are "widely and evenly distributed." That's still on their website! You can read it right now. And yet here we are, discussing classified deployments and Department of War contracts.
The safety theater
Now, to be fair (call me old-fashioned, but I try to be fair even to companies I'm skeptical of), OpenAI has put real money into alignment research. Their recent is genuine funding for independent researchers working on AGI safety. That's not nothing. They've also been on security research, which suggests at least some institutional commitment to not building Skynet.
Fontes
- Our agreement with the Department of War· OpenAI Blog
- Moving AI governance forward· OpenAI Blog
- OpenAI technical goals· OpenAI Blog
- Introducing OpenAI for Government· OpenAI Blog
- Advancing independent research on AI alignment· OpenAI Blog
- Working with US CAISI and UK AISI to build more secure AI systems· OpenAI Blog
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