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Comment by mrinterweb

5 months ago

The name "OpenAI" is a contraction since they don't seem "open" in any way. The only way I see "open" applying is "open for business."

I believe Sam has answered that question its open to public, anyone in the world can use ChatGpt for free so its "open"

They have several open models, including Whisper.

  • They shared a bunch of breadcrumbs that fell off the banquet table. Mistral and Google, direct competitors, actually published a lot of goodies that you can actually use and modify for hobbyist use cases.

Reminds me of OpenText, which is basically a software sweatshop with the most closed source ecosystems you could think of

This is a tired and trite comment that appears on every mention of OpenAI but contributes little to the discussion.

  • I think the purpose is to shift public sentiment? I lot of people in the free software world are justifiably upset over ClosedAI's marketing tactics.

    • Shifting public sentiment seems a worthy goal, but this particular comment ("OpenAI?? more like ClosedAI amirite") gets repeated so often I don't think its doing anything. It shows up on every mention of OpenAI but has no bearing to the particular piece of news being discussed. I think there's lots of more productive ways to critique and shift public sentiment around OpenAI. But maybe I'm just grouchy ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

I went to Burger King and there was no royalty working there at all!

What percentage of people who use their products care? 1%?

OpenAI is a brand, not a literal description of the company!

  • > OpenAI is a brand, not a literal description of the company!

    If the brand name is deeply contradictory to the business practices of the company, people will start making nasty puns and jokes, which can lead to serious reputation damages for the respective company.

Will this ever die? It feels like every time a post is made about OpenAI that someone loves to mention it.

  • No, it will probably never die. It is reinforced by the dissonance between their name and early philosophy and their current actions.

    • It should though, it's a stupid way to phrase the argument.

      OpenAI pivoted from non-profit to for-profit and it's fine to criticize them for that, if that's the argument you're making. But focusing on their name specifically doesn't make sense. I mean, what do you expect, that they rebrand to something else and lose a ton of brand recognition in the process? You can't possibly expect a company do that when they have no incentive to.

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