OpenAIロボティクス責任者ケイトリン・カリノウスキー、国防総省との契約を理由に退任
OpenAIのロボティクス部門責任者Caitlin Kalinowskiが、同社の国防総省との契約に抗議して辞任したとTechCrunch AIが報じた。
キーポイント
幹部の辞任
OpenAIのハードウェア担当役員でロボティクスチームを率いるCaitlin Kalinowskiが、国防総省との契約への抗議として辞任を発表した。
辞任の理由
辞任の直接的な理由は、OpenAIが国防総省と結んだ物議を醸す契約に対する反対である。
契約の影響
OpenAIの国防総省との契約は、社内で論争を引き起こし、主要な幹部の離脱という結果をもたらした。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この記事は、AI企業が軍事・防衛分野に進出する際の倫理的ジレンマと、それに伴う組織内部の緊張を浮き彫りにしている。主要な技術者の離脱は、OpenAIのロボティクス開発に短期的な影響を与える可能性があり、AI業界全体で軍事応用に関する議論を再燃させる契機となる。
編集コメント
AI技術の軍事応用を巡る倫理的問題が、単なる理念の議論を超えて、実際の人事・組織運営に直接影響を与えた事例として注目される。
ハードウェア担当役員のCaitlin Kalinowskiは本日、OpenAIの国防総省との物議を醸す契約に抗議して、同社のロボティクスチームを率いる役職からの辞任を発表しました。
原文を表示
Caitlin Kalinowski announced today that in response to OpenAI’s controversial agreement with the Department of Defense, she’s resigned from her role leading the company’s hardware team.
“This wasn’t an easy call,” Kalinowski said in a social media post. “AI has an important role in national security. But surveillance of Americans without judicial oversight and lethal autonomy without human authorization are lines that deserved more deliberation than they got.”
Kalinowski, who previously led the team building augmented reality glasses at Meta, joined OpenAI in November 2024. In her announcement today, she emphasized that the decision was “about principle, not people” and said she has “deep respect” for CEO Sam Altman and the OpenAI team.
In a follow-up post on X, Kalinowski added, “To be clear, my issue is that the announcement was rushed without the guardrails defined. It’s a governance concern first and foremost. These are too important for deals or announcements to be rushed.”
An OpenAI spokesperson confirmed Kalinowski’s departure to TechCrunch.
“We believe our agreement with the Pentagon creates a workable path for responsible national security uses of AI while making clear our red lines: no domestic surveillance and no autonomous weapons,” the company said in a statement. “We recognize that people have strong views about these issues and we will continue to engage in discussion with employees, government, civil society and communities around the world.”
OpenAI’s agreement with the Pentagon was announced just over a week ago, after discussions between the Pentagon and Anthropic fell through as the AI company tried to negotiate for safeguards preventing its technology from being used in mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. The Pentagon subsequently designated Anthropic a supply-chain risk. (Anthropic said it will fight the designation in court; in the meantime, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon said they will continue to make Anthropic’s Claude available to non-defense customers.)
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Then OpenAI quickly announced an agreement of its own allowing its technology to be used in classified environments. As executives attempted to explain the deal on social media, the company described it as taking “a more expansive, multi-layered approach” that relies not just on contract language, but also technical safeguards, to protect red lines similar to Anthropic’s.
Nonetheless, the controversy appears to have damaged OpenAI’s reputation among some consumers, with ChatGPT uninstalls surging 295% and Claude climbing to the top of the App Store charts. As of Saturday afternoon, Claude and ChatGPT remain the U.S. App Store’s No. 1 and No. 2 free apps, respectively.
This post has been updated to correct its description of Kalinowski’s role with OpenAI.
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Anthony Ha is TechCrunch’s weekend editor. Previously, he worked as a tech reporter at Adweek, a senior editor at VentureBeat, a local government reporter at the Hollister Free Lance, and vice president of content at a VC firm. He lives in New York City.
You can contact or verify outreach from Anthony by emailing anthony.ha@techcrunch.com.
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