Musk Drops Lawsuit Against OpenAI

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Facts

  • Tesla Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and billionaire Elon Musk on Tuesday dropped a lawsuit he'd filed in February against OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman for allegedly abandoning the firm's founding non-profit mission.1
  • Musk had alleged a breach of contract in OpenAI, turning its artificial intelligence (AI) project into a for-profit entity even though he said it was launched 'for the benefit of humanity.'2
  • While Musk's lawyers didn't provide a reason behind the decision, it comes a day before Altman and OpenAI were to state their arguments for the lawsuit's dismissal in a San Francisco court.3
  • Meanwhile, Altman called Musk's allegations 'incoherent' and 'fiction,' arguing OpenAI had 'no founding agreement, or any agreement at all with Musk.'4
  • Earlier this week, Musk had criticized OpenAI's collaboration with Apple to boost the latter's Siri voice assistant and operating systems with its ChatGPT chatbot.5

Sources: 1CNN, 2CNBC, 3Guardian, 4Independent and 5BBC News.

Narratives

  • Narrative A, as provided by Fortune. Now a for-profit entity aligned with Microsoft, OpenAI no longer publishes or open-sources its research, contradicting its founding principles. The Sam Altman-led firm is hypocritical in commercializing its powerful AI models, such as GPT-4. Musk's questions are relevant even if they don't have a legal bite.
  • Narrative B, as provided by Guardian. The least that can be said about Musk's lawsuit against Altman and OpenAI is that he aimed to advance his own commercial interests and AI ventures. His assertions are convoluted and baseless, and probably fueled by envy since he left OpenAI before its success exploded in the public consciousness.

Predictions