On (2), I would note that the ‘hype’ criticism is one that is commonly made about the claims of both a range of individual groups in AI, and about the field as a whole. Criticisms of DeepMind’s claims, and IBM’s (usefulness/impact of IBM Watson in health) come immediately to mind, as well as claims by a range of groups re: deployment of self-driving cars. It’s also a criticism made of the field as a whole (e.g. see various of Gary Marcus, Jack Stilgoe’s comments etc). This does not necessarily mean that it’s untrue of OpenAI (or that OpenAI are not one of the ‘hypier’), but I think it’s worth noting that this is not unique to OpenAI.
On (2), I would note that the ‘hype’ criticism is one that is commonly made about the claims of both a range of individual groups in AI, and about the field as a whole. Criticisms of DeepMind’s claims, and IBM’s (usefulness/impact of IBM Watson in health) come immediately to mind, as well as claims by a range of groups re: deployment of self-driving cars. It’s also a criticism made of the field as a whole (e.g. see various of Gary Marcus, Jack Stilgoe’s comments etc). This does not necessarily mean that it’s untrue of OpenAI (or that OpenAI are not one of the ‘hypier’), but I think it’s worth noting that this is not unique to OpenAI.