Here's the link for the feature.
The article painted a rather shady image of OpenAI:
But three days at OpenAI’s office—and nearly three dozen interviews with past and current employees, collaborators, friends, and other experts in the field—suggest a different picture. There is a misalignment between what the company publicly espouses and how it operates behind closed doors. Over time, it has allowed a fierce competitiveness and mounting pressure for ever more funding to erode its founding ideals of transparency, openness, and collaboration. Many who work or worked for the company insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak or feared retaliation. Their accounts suggest that OpenAI, for all its noble aspirations, is obsessed with maintaining secrecy, protecting its image, and retaining the loyalty of its employees.
A few comments from Xrisk/EA folks that I've seen (which I agree with):
FHI's Markus Andjerlung: https://twitter.com/Manderljung/status/1229863911249391618
CSER's Haydn Belfield: https://twitter.com/HaydnBelfield/status/1230119965178630149
To me, AI heavyweight and past president of AAAI (and past critic of OpenAI) Rao Kambhampati put it well - written like / has tone of a hit piece, but without an actual hit (i.e. any relevation that actually justifies it):
https://twitter.com/rao2z/status/1229599668683673600