Monday, December 23, 2024

OpenAI Just Dropped Elon Musk’s Novel Bills: ‘You Can’t Sue AGI’

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The lawsuit between Elon Musk and OpenAI is ongoing Really heating up.

OpenAI just went down new blog post defending himself against Musk, who describes novel text messages between co-founders Ilya Sutskever, Greg Brockman, Sam Altman, Elon Musk and former board member Shivon Zilis.

“You can’t sue your way to AGI,” reads the OpenAI blog, referring to the artificial general intelligence Altman promised soon. “We have great respect for Elon’s achievements and are grateful for his early contributions to OpenAl, but he should be competing in the marketplace, not in the courtroom. It is extremely important for the United States to remain a world leader in Al. Our mission is to bring the benefits of AGI to all humanity. We have been and will remain a mission-driven organization. We hope that Elon shares this goal and will uphold the values ​​of innovation and free market competition that have made him successful.”

Some of the novel messages revealed show that in July 2017, Brockman told Zilis about a meeting with Musk, who allegedly said that a nonprofit was definitely the right structure to start with, but “may not be the right one right now.” Later that month, Brockman wrote to Musk that the path for OpenAI should be: “1. Non-profit organization dedicated to artificial intelligence research (until the end of 2017) 2. For-profit artificial intelligence research + hardware (from 2018) 3. Government project (when: ??).”

The blog also highlights Musk’s attempts to maneuver into the CEO position and gain majority control of the company (although it adds that during one conversation Musk said he “didn’t care about equity capital” but “just needed to raise $80 billion for the city for Mars”). Musk also proposed that OpenAI transform into Tesla, which has already happened has been previously disclosed. When the negotiations ended in failure because the co-founders of OpenAI rejected his proposal (Brockman and Sutskever admitted that they were afraid of a power struggle), Musk resigned from the company.

The blog said that after Musk resigned, he organized a farewell for all employees from the team, encouraging them to “follow the path we have set out to raise billions annually” and that he “will continue advanced Al research in Tesla, which was the primary vehicle, his in his opinion, he could obtain this level of financing.

Later, around the time Musk was working to acquire Twitter, he texted Altman that he was “concerned” about seeing the company’s reports new valuation of $20 billion. “De facto. “I provided almost all of the seed funding, A and most of the B round,” he wrote, according to the leaked texts. “It’s a bait and switch.”

A few months after this interaction, Musk founded an OpenAI competitor, xAI.

Some of the news published by OpenAI was previously discussed in a lawsuit filed by Musk in an ongoing lawsuit against OpenAI and its partner Microsoft. Musk’s lawsuit filed in March alleges that OpenAI has strayed from its original nonprofit mission of advancing artificial intelligence for the public good (he withdrew it in June 2024 without explanation, then re-filed it in August 2024).

Today’s OpenAI update attempts to counter Musk’s narrative by presenting evidence that he, not Altman, tried to take control in the company’s early days – a direct response to Musk’s recent claims in the lawsuit regarding Altman’s consolidation of power.

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