OpenAI Looking to Hire ‘Head of Preparedness’ to Tackle AI Dangers

5Mind. The Meme Platform

The role, based in San Francisco, requires the person to build capability evaluations, establish threat models, and build mitigations.

OpenAI is seeking to hire a candidate for the post of “Head of Preparedness” to tackle dangers posed by the proliferation of artificial intelligence (AI), CEO Sam Altman said in a Dec. 27 post on X.

OpenAI sparked initial public interest in AI chatbot interactions with the popular launch of ChatGPT in November 2022.

“This is a critical role at an important time; models are improving quickly and are now capable of many great things, but they are also starting to present some real challenges,” Altman wrote.

“The potential impact of models on mental health was something we saw a preview of in 2025; we are just now seeing models get so good at computer security they are beginning to find critical vulnerabilities.”

The post comes as OpenAI is facing a host of lawsuits on the subject of mental health. In November, seven complaints were filed against the company in California, alleging that its ChatGPT chatbot sent three people into delusional “rabbit holes” while encouraging four others to kill themselves.

According to the lawsuits, the four deaths occurred following the victims’ conversation with ChatGPT about suicide. In some cases, the chatbot romanticized suicide, advising the victims on ways to carry out the act.

As for computer security, multiple reports have flagged the risks posed by AIs.

For instance, a May report from McKinsey & Company warned that AI models capable of detecting fraud and securing networks can also infer identities, expose sensitive information, and reassemble stripped-out details.

The State of Cybersecurity Resilience 2025 report from Accenture warned that 90 percent of companies are not modernized enough to defend against AI-driven threats.

In its Aug. 27 Threat Intelligence Report, AI company Anthropic, which makes the Claude AI, said that AI was being weaponized to carry out sophisticated cybercrimes. In one operation, a hacker used Claude to infiltrate 17 organizations, with the AI used to penetrate networks, analyze stolen data, and create psychologically targeted ransom notes.

In his post, Altman said that while OpenAI has a “strong foundation” for measuring the growing capabilities of its AI models, the company is entering a world where a “more nuanced understanding and measurement” is required to assess how these capabilities could be abused and to limit downsides.

These are “hard” questions with very little precedent, he said. Many ideas that sound good have “edge cases,” which are extreme or unusual scenarios that test the boundaries of a system, such as an AI.

“This will be a stressful job, and you’ll jump into the deep end pretty much immediately,” Altman said.

The role, based in San Francisco, requires the person to build capability evaluations, establish threat models, and build mitigations, according to a post by OpenAI. The job offers $555,000 in annual compensation plus equity.

The head of preparedness will oversee mitigation design across major risk areas, such as cyber and biology, and ensure that safeguards are “technically sound, effective, and aligned with underlying threat models.”

As of September, ChatGPT had 700 million weekly active users globally.

By Naveen Athrappully

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

What Happens Next?

Today's political discourse focuses on winning arguments, not on what happens when beliefs collide with reality.

NFL’s Bad Bunny had Fans Running

NFL and NBC lost viewers for about 30 minutes on Big Game Sunday as fans ditched network TV for TPUSA’s All-American Halftime Show online.

Senior Voters Are Key For GOP Victory In Midterms

Seniors are the most reliable voting bloc and could decide 2026. To win, the GOP must prevent major Medicare Advantage cost hikes for seniors.

Post-Epstein Document Dump: The Moment for Left-Right Populist Unity?

Claims that a powerful, lawless network of child abusers has captured major Western institutions are now asserted with unprecedented certainty.

When care leads to death

On December 12, Illinois legalize physician assisted suicide, rebranded under the soothing sounding banner of “medical aid in dying,” or MAID.

US Military Boards Oil Tanker in Indian Ocean After Pursuing It From Caribbean

U.S. forces boarded a crude oil tanker without incident in the Indian Ocean after chasing it from the Caribbean, citing a breach of a U.S. quarantine.

Dr. Oz Advises People to Get Measles Vaccine as Cases Rise in Several States

The administrator for CMS has advised people to get a vaccine for measles in response to a rise in cases nationwide, mainly in South Carolina.

NFL, Turning Point USA Present Vastly Different Halftime Shows

While Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny performed in Spanish at the Super Bowl, Kid Rock headlined an alternative concert honoring Charlie Kirk.

California Sues Companies for Supporting Ghost Gun Manufacturing

California AG Rob Bonta sued two companies and over 100 individuals, alleging they illegally distributed computer code used to 3D-print ghost guns.

Why Canada’s China Pivot Makes US Tariff Relief Harder

Analysts say Ottawa’s Beijing outreach is raising new security and trade concerns in Washington—making U.S. tariff relief even harder to secure.

Trump Lifts Biden-Era Restrictions on Commercial Fishing in Atlantic Marine Monument

President Trump revoked a prohibition on commercial fishing in the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument.

US Unveils Interim Trade Framework With India, Drops Punitive Tariff

“The Interim trade framework between the US and India will represent a historic milestone in our countries’ partnership" countries said in a joint statement.

Trump Says He’s Still Looking ‘Seriously’ at Sending $2,000 Tariff Rebate Payments

Trump said in an interview that his administration is still considering sending out $2,000 payments to Americans derived from his tariffs.
spot_img

Related Articles