Tech

'Directionally very bad' has entered the lexicon, thanks to Sam Altman and Mira Murati

Sam Altman gesticulates while seated next to Mira Murati
PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images
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There's something for everyone in the texts between former OpenAI colleagues Sam Altman and Mira Murati that resurfaced this week in the trial over Elon Musk's lawsuit.

As soon as the exchanges were posted to social media Wednesday night, users began repurposing them — turning Altman's pleas about his future at OpenAI and Murati's very frank responses into relatable memes.

Among the most creative was a post on X that set the conversation to music, transforming it into a "2011 style emo" love song.

The snippet in which Altman asks Murati for intel about his standing during his short-lived 2023 ouster from OpenAI seems to be a favorite.

One X user quipped that they were trying to figure out how to make "directionally very bad" — Murati's blunt message to Altman about the situation — into a Halloween costume.

Altman being told that he was unwelcome at discussions about OpenAI's future resonated deeply.

The texts are part of the exhibits in the blockbuster trial underway in federal court in San Francisco over the $150 billion lawsuit Musk filed against Altman and OpenAI, alleging he was deceived into bankrolling a nonprofit that was turned into a for-profit entity after he left.

Murati, who took the stand at the trial, was the chief technology officer at OpenAI when Altman was ousted, and in the texts, he beseeched her for information and help returning. Murati later left OpenAI to start her own company, Thinking Machines Lab.

At one point, she tells Altman that the board appointed a new CEO — former Twitch CEO Emmett Shear — and refers to him as "rando Twitch guy." The phrase is so brutally dismissive that one can only cheer for Shear's pitch-perfect response.

The trial is expected to continue at least into next week. Hopefully, the memes will, too.

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Tracy Connor
Tracy Connor is the Standards Editor at Business Insider. In her role she works with journalists on questions during the reporting process, reviews sensitive pieces, oversees editorial policies, and helps train people on standards.She is the former editor-in-chief of The Daily Beast, where she began as the executive editor, overseeing an award-winning newsroom of about 70 staffers. Previously, she was a senior reporter for the NBC News Investigations Unit, working on projects for digital and broadcast. Prior to that, she spent 10 years at the New York Daily News as an editor and reporter; she has also worked for the New York Post, United Press International, and a chain of weekly newspapers in Brooklyn.A graduate of Columbia University and the Coney Island Sideshow School, she lives in Brooklyn with her franken-dog Pearl. Don't say anything bad about Dolly Parton or em-dashes in front of her!