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Elon Musk’s lawsuit over OpenAI’s shift to a for-profit model kicks off in Oakland, with Musk, Sam Altman and Microsoft’s Satya Nadella set to testify. The case highlights internal clashes as OpenAI faces fierce AI competition and gears up for a potential $1 trillion IPO.
Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman’s OpenAI for billions in damages, claiming breaches stemming from their 2015 co-founding agreement. The jury trial, starting Monday, could reshape the competitive dynamics in the A.I. industry.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman accused Anthropic of using scare tactics to hype its new Mythos cybersecurity model, likening it to selling a bomb shelter after building a bomb. He argued that fear-based marketing keeps AI tools in the hands of a select elite and noted that such hype is common across the industry.
This piece breaks down The New Yorker’s 18,000-word deep dive into Sam Altman’s trust issues and OpenAI’s turbulent history—from his firing and secret “shadow board” deal to safety disputes and the botched investigation into his conduct. It highlights key conflicts with Musk, Dario Amodei, Microsoft’s unauthorized India release, and a fleeting “sell to Putin” brainstorm.
This article breaks down The New Yorker’s 18,000-word exposé on Sam Altman and OpenAI, detailing boardroom coups, safety disputes, secret pacts, and clashes with Musk, Amodei, and others. It then covers OpenAI’s policy “new deal” proposal and their acquisition of TBPN.
A jury in Oakland will soon decide whether OpenAI’s switch from a nonprofit to a for-profit under Sam Altman was fraudulent, a ruling that could unravel the legal basis of the entire AI sector. Elon Musk demands OpenAI revert to nonprofit status and directs any damages to charity, while OpenAI fires back with regulatory complaints and PR campaigns. A verdict for Musk could tank OpenAI’s $850 billion IPO and expose other AI firms to donor and shareholder clawbacks.
The article details the internal conflict at OpenAI that led to CEO Sam Altman's firing, driven by concerns from board member Ilya Sutskever about Altman's honesty and safety protocols. After a swift backlash from employees and investors, Altman was reinstated just days later, highlighting the tensions around leadership and trust in AI development.