Holden might have agreed to have Helen replace him. She used to work at Open Phil, too, so Holden probably knows her well enough. Open Phil bought a board seat, and it’s not weird for them to fill it as they see fit, without having it reserved only for a specific individual.
It can’t be up to date, since they recently announced that Helen Toner joined the board, and she’s not listed.
The website now lists Helen Toner, but do not list Holden, so it seems he is no longer on the board.
That’s pretty wild, especially considering getting Holden on the board was a major condition of OpenPhilanthropy’s $30,000,000 grant: https://www.openphilanthropy.org/focus/global-catastrophic-risks/potential-risks-advanced-artificial-intelligence/openai-general-support#Details_on_Open_Philanthropy8217s_role
Thought it also says the grant was for 3 years, so maybe it shouldn’t be surprising that his board seat only lasted that long.
Holden might have agreed to have Helen replace him. She used to work at Open Phil, too, so Holden probably knows her well enough. Open Phil bought a board seat, and it’s not weird for them to fill it as they see fit, without having it reserved only for a specific individual.