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Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has proposed giving 5% of the company’s shares to a US sovereign wealth fund. The Financial Times reported on Thursday“, citing two people familiar with the matter. Under the proposal, other AI companies would donate similar stakes, although important questions remain about the details.
According to the Financial Times, the donation aims to “secure good relations with the administration and…address negative political reactions.”
There were similar discussions CNBC reported this in June This was later confirmed by President Trump, who said he had discussed “concepts by which the pieces could be presented to the American public, where the American public becomes an essential partner with the companies.” At that time, a specific size for the proposed equity stake had not been determined.
The talks are still preliminary, and according to the Financial Times, any formal action would likely require congressional approval, which would greatly complicate the matter.
Altman has also publicly discussed the idea of creating a public AI fund, and OpenAI has become increasingly specific in its proposals for how to structure such a fund. Recently, a political paper was issued entitled “Industrial policy for the age of intelligencewhich OpenAI released in April, proposed creating a public wealth fund that could invest directly in AI labs and companies deploying their technologies.
“The proceeds of the Fund could be distributed directly to citizens, allowing more people to participate directly in the upside of AI-driven growth, regardless of their initial wealth or access to capital,” the document said.
It was the most aggressive version of this policy Proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) in June, calling for a one-time 50% tax on shares of AI companies, with the combined shares deposited in a public wealth fund. The bill, called the US Sovereign Wealth Fund AI Act, applies to all “systemically important” AI companies, including those that deal with data centers, infrastructure, or robotics. Under the proposal, companies like Google and SpaceX that include AI only as part of their business would be allowed to spin off non-AI-related parts of the company to avoid taxes.
The draft law has not yet been submitted to the committee.
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