This was just announced by the OpenAI Twitter account:
Implicitly, the previous board members associated with EA, Helen Toner and Tasha McCauley, are ("in principle") no longer going to be part of the board.
I think it would be useful to have, in the future, a postmortem of what happened, from an EA perspective. EA had two members on the board of arguably the most important company of the century, and it has just lost them after several days of embarrassment. I think it would be useful for the community if we could get a better idea of what led to this sequence of events.
[update: Larry Summers said in 2017 that he likes EA.]
Robert's comment raised the possibility of sexism playing a role ("many layers") in what happened. I don't think he was obliged to cite sources for the proposition that sexism exists in at least parts of the AI industry in a four-line comment. That has been a topic of discussion on a number of past threads.
The comment remains a controversial one, with lots of upvotes and downvotes almost cancelling each other out. To be clear, I don't think it is a particularly good comment. I also don't think it is a -14 comment based on the prevailing standards in this forum. Voting a comment below -9 collapses it into a single-line view, largely hiding it.