Elon Musk’s $38 million created OpenAI as a nonprofit safe haven against Google’s perceived recklessness. He now asks an Oakland court to unwind the for-profit structure, return $150 billion to the nonprofit parent, and remove Sam Altman and Greg Brockman from leadership.
Musk frames the lawsuit as protection of charitable integrity. His opening argument: no charity is safe if founders pivot to profit once they see dollar signs. OpenAI’s defense characterizes the suit as a tantrum from a competitor who grew frustrated with a project he couldn’t control, then launched his own for-profit rival, xAI.
The technical legal points are complex, so both sides retreated to character assassination. Musk’s lawyers opened their cross-examination of Sam Altman with a single question: "Are you trustworthy?" They weaponized Altman’s history of perceived deception, including his brief firing last year for being "not consistently candid." Altman, soft-spoken on the stand, attempted to maintain a persona of humble entrepreneurship.
Musk faced his own hurdles. While he initially charmed the room with an "aw shucks" engineer routine, cross-examination brought out the pugilist. He grew snippy and defensive when questioned about his hypocrisy in running for-profit AI companies. The jury is now weighing which billionaire's version of the future they find less cynical.
"The courtroom became a vibes-based cage match. Because the technical legal points are so complex, both sides have retreated to character assassination."
- Mike Isaac, The Daily
In 2015, Musk and Altman were allies united against Google’s Larry Page, whom Musk called a "speciesist" for prioritizing AI over humanity. That joint mission evaporated when OpenAI secured a $1 billion investment from Microsoft, which later ballooned to a $10 billion commitment following ChatGPT’s viral success in 2022.
The industry shifted from a fringe pursuit among friends to a high-stakes war involving the world’s largest capital pools. The tactics turned physical and toxic. The Daily notes the competition now includes competitive intelligence gathering, reputation dragging, and even Molotov cocktails thrown at executive homes.
Regardless of the verdict, the trial stripped away Silicon Valley’s veneer of "building for the good of mankind." The public watches two men argue over the fate of the human race while fighting like corporate raiders. The race to AGI is no longer a research project - it is a brutalist struggle for dominance.
