Musk loses case against Sam Altman over OpenAI mission
A federal grand jury dismissed Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman regarding the company's mission. The jury ruled that Musk's claims were not filed within the statute of limitations, preventing any liability for Altman. This ruling is a significant setback for Musk, who argued that Altman's shift to a for-profit model compromised OpenAI's original humanitarian goals.
- ▪A federal grand jury dismissed Elon Musk's claims against Sam Altman.
- ▪The jury found that Musk's claims were not timely filed within the statute of limitations.
- ▪Musk's lawsuit argued that Altman's transition to a for-profit model prioritized monetary gain over OpenAI's original mission.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
A federal grand jury dismissed Elon Musk‘s claims that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was abandoning the company’s original humanitarian mission in a ruling on Monday. The jury unanimously decided that all of Musk’s claims were not brought in a timely manner within the statute of limitations, and thus Altman could not be held liable. Recommended Stories New Yorkers slammed by nightmare Monday morning commute thanks to LIRR strike Paramount considers podcast deal with Stephen Miller’s wife: Report European legislators join members of Congress in scrutinizing Paramount-WBD merger WHAT ELON MUSK’S LAWSUIT AGAINST SAM ALTMAN COULD CHANGE ABOUT THE AI INDUSTRY The ruling is a major blow to Musk, who brought the lawsuit against his former friend and co-founder of OpenAI, a company they built together…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.