OpenAI seeks to admit Musk's settlement threat in trial

OpenAI has asked a federal court to allow testimony about a threatening message Elon Musk sent to company president Greg Brockman just before the Musk v. Altman trial began. In the exchange, Musk warned that Brockman and CEO Sam Altman would become 'the most hated men in America' if they rejected a settlement. The move could reveal Musk's motives in the ongoing litigation.

The Musk v. Altman trial started last week in federal court, with Musk testifying first. OpenAI accuses Musk of abandoning the company's nonprofit mission under Altman’s leadership. In a Sunday court filing, OpenAI revealed that two days before the trial, Musk messaged Brockman to gauge interest in a settlement. Brockman suggested both sides drop their claims, but Musk responded: “By the end of this week, you and Sam [Altman] will be the most hated men in America. If you insist, so be it.” OpenAI did not accept and the trial proceeded as scheduled. Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers is expected to decide today whether to admit Brockman’s testimony about the message, potentially overriding typical protections for settlement communications. OpenAI argues the message was coercive, not conciliatory, and shows Musk’s bias to attack a competitor. They draw parallels to Musk’s 2022 Twitter lawsuit, where his “World War III” threat was admitted because his team intended to disclose it. Musk’s lawyers are pushing to exclude it under settlement negotiation precedents. During his testimony, Musk made concessions on AI risks and admitted limited knowledge of safety at his company xAI. Brockman, a cofounder and one of OpenAI’s largest individual stakeholders, is set to testify soon, possibly today or tomorrow. He recently defended his $30 billion stake in court as the result of “blood, sweat, and tears.”

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Courtroom illustration depicting jury selection in Elon Musk v. OpenAI trial in Oakland federal court.
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Jury selected in Musk v. Altman trial in Oakland court

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A jury was selected on Monday in federal court in Oakland, California, for Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI and Sam Altman. Some jurors expressed concerns about Musk and AI technology but assured the court they could remain impartial. The trial centers on allegations that OpenAI abandoned its nonprofit mission.

OpenAI President Greg Brockman wrapped his testimony Tuesday in the Musk v. Altman trial by describing a tense 2017 meeting at Elon Musk's mansion where he feared physical violence. He also explained personal journal entries that Musk's team claims show OpenAI abandoning its nonprofit mission. The testimony highlights early conflicts over OpenAI's direction.

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New documents presented in the Musk v. Altman trial show Elon Musk proposed bringing OpenAI leaders including Sam Altman to Tesla in 2018. The evidence highlights Musk's push for control over the AI lab's direction at the time.

Following OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's recent apology, families of victims from the February Tumbler Ridge school shooting have filed lawsuits against the company, claiming it ignored internal flags on the shooter's ChatGPT activity and failed to alert authorities.

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A seventh lawsuit has been added to the growing legal action against OpenAI by families of victims from the February Tumbler Ridge school shooting, alleging the company's ChatGPT oversight enabled the attack. Filed in San Francisco federal court, the suits claim OpenAI failed to alert authorities despite flagging the shooter's account. OpenAI has expressed regret over not acting sooner.

Caitlin Kalinowski, OpenAI's head of robotics, has resigned, citing insufficient deliberation on ethical guardrails in the company's recent deal with the Department of Defense. She expressed concerns over potential surveillance and autonomous weapons in a post on X. OpenAI acknowledged her departure and reiterated its commitments against domestic surveillance and lethal autonomous systems.

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Elon Musk is requiring banks and other firms working on SpaceX's initial public offering to purchase subscriptions to his Grok AI chatbot, according to sources cited by The New York Times. Some banks have agreed to spend tens of millions of dollars on the service and are integrating it into their systems. The condition comes as SpaceX confidentially filed IPO paperwork with the SEC this week.

 

 

 

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