OpenAI's Brockman testifies on fiery Musk clash in trial

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.

Greg Brockman, OpenAI's cofounder and president, testified in federal court on Tuesday during the Musk v. Altman trial. He recounted a 2017 gathering at Elon Musk's 47-acre estate in Hillsborough, south of San Francisco, with Ilya Sutskever to discuss OpenAI's future. 'I actually thought he was going to hit me,' Brockman said of Musk during the meeting, which involved discussions on transitioning to a for-profit structure amid Musk's ultimatum for control or nonprofit status. Actor Amber Heard, then Musk's girlfriend, had served whiskey before leaving with a friend, Brockman added. Musk voluntarily left OpenAI's board in 2018 after resigning in February that year, citing irreconcilable paths, including a proposed Tesla merger that others rejected. In his departing speech to about 40 employees, Musk indicated he would pursue AGI at Tesla by cutting corners on AI safety to compete with Google, Brockman testified, which damaged team morale. Musk's attorney Steven Molo forced Brockman to read journal entries from 2015 to 2023, alleging they reveal greed and mission abandonment. One 2017 entry pondered flipping to for-profit, musing 'Making the money for us sounds great' and questioning a $1 billion career goal. Brockman, whose stake is now worth about $30 billion, explained these as stream-of-consciousness explorations of Musk's proposals, not firm plans. He rejected calls to return $29 billion, noting his contributions predated ChatGPT's success. OpenAI lawyer Sarah Eddy guided Brockman to contextualize entries, where he worried about Musk becoming an 'AGI dictator' or quitting, and noted it would be 'morally bankrupt' to steal the nonprofit from Musk—though Musk left voluntarily. Brockman emphasized concerns over Musk's AI knowledge and leadership, backing Sam Altman instead.

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Elon Musk flustered at witness stand under tough cross-examination in OpenAI trial.
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Elon Musk stumbles repeatedly during OpenAI trial testimony

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Elon Musk testified for three days as the first witness in his lawsuit against OpenAI, facing tough cross-examination that highlighted inconsistencies and concessions. The trial, ongoing in federal court, centers on Musk's claims that OpenAI abandoned its nonprofit mission. OpenAI lawyers portrayed Musk as jealous and dishonest, damaging his credibility before the jury.

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.

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Sam Altman took the stand on Tuesday in the ongoing Musk v. Altman trial, addressing claims about leadership struggles at OpenAI. He described Elon Musk's insistence on total control and shared personal reflections on a 2023 ouster. Closing arguments are scheduled to begin Thursday.

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has apologized to the Tumbler Ridge community in Canada for not alerting police to the shooter's disturbing ChatGPT interactions. In a letter published Friday, he expressed deep regret over the February tragedy. OpenAI had suspended Jesse Van Rootselaar's account eight months prior.

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Amazon MGM Studios has pulled the plug on a nearly completed film about OpenAI chief Sam Altman. The project, directed by Luca Guadagnino, will now seek a new distributor.

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