OpenAI Warns Superintelligence Could Concentrate Power Without Decentralization

  • Altman's new principles warn superintelligence could concentrate power in few companies.
  • Democratization tops the five-pillar charter, replacing OpenAI's 2018 AGI mission.
  • OpenAI commits to broad AI access as decentralized rivals like Bittensor expand.
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OpenAI published five guiding principles on April 26, warning that superintelligence could consolidate power among a small group of companies. The lab pledged to widely disseminate the technology to prevent that outcome.

Sam Altman shared the framework on X. It replaces OpenAI’s 2018 AGI charter and lands as decentralized AI projects compete for the same narrative.

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OpenAI Reframes Superintelligence Around Five Principles

The five principles are democratization, empowerment, universal prosperity, resilience, and adaptability. The first commits OpenAI to resisting any concentration of AI control, including within the company itself. It also routes key decisions through democratic processes rather than internal lab choices.

Altman framed it as the lab’s first major principles update since 2018. Empowerment promises broad public access to general AI and the tokens markets that have grown around it.

The remaining three pillars cover economic transition risks, coordination on safety, and a willingness to revise positions. The 2026 charter mentions AGI only twice, signaling a shift toward a wider commitment to AI infrastructure.

Decentralized AI Rivals Push Back

The warning lands as crypto-native AI networks expand. Bittensor (TAO) ran the largest-ever decentralized large-language-model training on its Templar subnet in early April. Grayscale has filed for a TAO-focused ETF, drawing fresh institutional capital to the network.

Critics argue that OpenAI is raising concerns about decentralization only after locking in dominant compute and capital. The company raised more than $110 billion at a $730 billion valuation earlier this year, with Amazon contributing $50 billion of that round.

Validator subnets on Bittensor and similar protocols remain small relative to that capital base. Whether the new principles change how OpenAI deploys its money will determine the document’s weight.


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