The Stunning Salads at Mira Murati's New Start

Thinking Machines Lab, Mira Murati's new startup, has attracted attention to the extremely high wages given to technology specialists. Before launching products, the company is investing in the construction of a elite team in the field of artificial intelligence. Thinking Machines Lab, very controversial artificial intelligence start [...]
Thinking Machines Lab, Mira Murati's new startup, has attracted attention to the extremely high wages given to technology specialists. Before launching products, the company is investing in the construction of a elite team in the field of artificial intelligence.
Thinking Machines Lab, a very talked about artificial intelligence start, founded earlier this year by former director of OpenAI technology Mira Murati, has spent a lot of money on technical talents before launching any product.
Thus, foreign media reports reported that TML is paying two members of its $450,000 technical staff salary, while another is receiving $500,000, according to data from Business Insiver. And a fourth employee, listed as “co-founder/ex1>, gets $450,000 a year, writes Scan, transmits albinfo.
The data comes from federal files that companies must file when employing an American resident with an H-1B visa, which allows them to hire 85,000 specialised workers through an annual lottery.
Since companies rarely discover records of wages, the figures offer a rare view of what candidates are earning at this job market. Values include only basic wages, not lucrative entrance bonus and capital rewards, often the place where large sums are won.
The data is said to be from the first quarter of this year, before Murati collected $2 billion in initial financing at an estimated $10 billion, according to Business Insiver.
Murati spent six and a half years at OpenAI, where she worked in the development of ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence research initiatives. It was briefly appointed temporary CEO in November 2023 after the OpenAI board unexpectedly dismissed Sam Altman, a move that caused unrest within the company. After Altman's return to office as CEO, Murati resumed her role as chief of the technology sector.












