Musk's case against OpenAI lands roughly in its first week
Briefly

Musk's case against OpenAI lands roughly in its first week
"Musk's case had hit 'some rough spots.' His own admissions on cross-examination, the judge's repeated warnings about the scope of the dispute, and a series of pre-trial rulings narrowing the legal claims have all combined to make the world's richest man's case against the most valuable AI company in the world look, at least at this stage, harder to win than its initial framing implied."
"The headline damages figure is more than $130bn, though some early coverage has cited $150bn; either way the structural remedies Musk is seeking, including a partial unwinding of OpenAI's for-profit conversion, are arguably the more consequential ask."
Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI, seeking over $130 billion, faces significant challenges after three days of cross-examination. Musk claims he founded OpenAI to prevent monopolization of AI, but his former collaborators turned it into a for-profit entity. His admissions during cross-examination and the judge's warnings have complicated his case. The trial, which began on April 28, involves Musk, OpenAI, and Microsoft, with the judge ultimately deciding the verdict despite a jury being present.
Read at TNW | Insider
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