OpenAI was exposed for removing the core commitment of "AI safety for the benefit of humanity, not constrained by profit demands" from its mission statement, echoing the image collapse of Google's "do no evil" pledge, and gradually moving away from its initial intention of developing non-profit, human-benefiting general artificial intelligence (AGI).

In tax documents from 2022 to 2023, OpenAI clearly defined its mission as building "safe AI that benefits humanity without being restricted by financial returns," but in the latest tax documents submitted by the end of 2025, it not only removed the key term "safe," retaining only "ensuring general AI benefits all humanity," but also eliminated the commitment of "not being constrained by profit demands," indicating that its development will no longer be limited by AI safety and officially considering profitability. This adjustment in commitments also confirmed OpenAI's recent decision to disband its mission alignment team. A female executive who was fired revealed that the company had opened adult content-related features to please some users, while OpenAI responded by accusing her of gender discrimination, sparking a heated public debate.

It is reported that OpenAI has long deviated from its original goals, not only closing its technology but also facing legal disputes with one of its founders, Elon Musk, due to continuous retreats in moral commitments.

This adjustment in commitments does not represent a complete abandonment of AI safety, but the gradual lowering of moral standards and the emphasis on profit pursuit have made its future development increasingly aggressive. At the same time, the planned addition of advertisements to the GPT series products has raised strong concerns about user privacy security, given that AI holds a large amount of users' core private information.