The Responsible Edge Podcast
When OpenAI completed its restructuring as a Delaware Public Benefit Corporation in October 2025, it did not create any new mandate to publish safety metrics, disclose how outputs are generated, or give civil society organisations formal standing in governance. A public benefit corporation requires directors to consider broader stakeholder interests. It does not require them to demonstrate that they have. That distinction is the subject of this episode of The Responsible Edge. Host Charlie Martin speaks with Asher Jay, National Geographic Explorer, systems strategist, and Chief Network Architect of the Shareholder Democracy Network, about a Financial Times piece asking whether public benefit corporations can solve AI governance challenges. Jay's position is direct. "Just making it about intention and not having tangible ways to translate that into practice is a cop-out." She traces OpenAI's structural evolution from nonprofit to capped-profit entity to PBC as a case study in how governance language can travel further than governance substance. Anthropic, also a PBC, faces the same test. The conversation covers mandatory safety metric disclosure, output-level transparency, why retail proxy voting is a practical lever that currently goes unused, and why civil society should hold voting seats, not advisory roles, at AI company board level. "AI is also a privilege," Jay observes. "I don't think it reaches a vast majority that we don't even converse about." The governance question is not resolved here. Its structure is made visible. If these questions sit close to your work, this episode is worth your time. #AIGovernance #PublicBenefitCorporation #OpenAI #CorporateAccountability #ShareholderDemocracy #TheResponsibleEdge
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