Elon Musk has lost his lawsuit against Sam Altman and OpenAI

(techcrunch.com)

571 points | by nycdatasci 4 hours ago ago

262 comments

  • granzymes 3 hours ago

    Because no one has commented yet on the legal significance:

    Musk lost today because the jury found that he waited too long to bring his claims. The jury answers only yes/no questions, so we do not know their exact thoughts, but it is likely they determined that the 2019 and 2021 Microsoft deals were too similar to the 2023 Microsoft deal that was the centerpiece of Musk’s lawsuit. Musk could have brought the same lawsuit in 2019 or 2021, meaning his claims were untimely for the 3 year statute of limitations.

    Because the statute of limitations is a precondition, the jury was not asked to find any other facts. They may tell the press what they thought on other issues, or they may not.

    The judge was prepared to immediately accept the jury’s finding, and said she agreed that the jury’s decision was supported by the evidence.

    It is possible for Musk to appeal, but success is vanishingly unlikely. Whether Musk’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations is a quintessential question of fact, and appellate courts are extraordinarily deferential to factual findings by juries so as a practical matter it’s almost impossible to appeal this verdict.

    • granzymes 3 hours ago

      My own thoughts:

      If I had been on the jury, I would have found against Musk on every point.

      His lawyers created a “3 phases of doubt” to try and sidestep the statute of limitations, but it was clearly bogus and he was on notice of OpenAI creating a for-profit in 2019.

      Musk was perfectly happy to have OpenAI be a for-profit, a non-profit with an attached for-profit (the current structure), or even just absorbed into Tesla. His complaints fell flat for me given the number of emails where he said that a non-profit was likely a mistake.

      This is technical, but Musk clearly never created a charitable trust, which was a precondition for his claims. His funds were donated for general use by OpenAI, not for any specific use that would allow him to claim breach of charitable trust. Also, all of his funds were spent by no later than 2020 which is before his alleged breach in 2023.

      Musk unreasonably delayed bringing this case until the success of ChatGPT and starting a competing AI company, and he had unclean hands because he attempted to sabotage OpenAI repeatedly by poaching its key staff while on the board.

      • DoesntMatter22 2 hours ago

        Musk should have just made another company and then he’d have another 500 billion but he had that mistake and now it’s over. Then again we’ll see how well open ai does over the long term

        • granzymes 2 hours ago

          Evidence at trial showed that Musk attempted to pursue AGI at Tesla starting in 2017 before he left the board of OpenAI. He was unsuccessful in that endeavor and later restarted his efforts in xAI after the success of ChatGPT.

          • big_toast an hour ago

            Musk leaves the board in 2018 I think. And something happens in DX-754 where they've pivoted to AI in SpaceX around then too. I had a lot of trouble telling what "AI" meant in late 2017 at Tesla.

            ---

            Sept 1, 2017 DX-669: Funding paused confirmation. Elon is still on the board for a while. DX-707 specifies the board as of Sept 26, 2017, and even suggests adding Shivon, Jared, Sam Teller.

            Jan 31, 2018 DX-748: Elon is still discussing things with Greg. Elon: "The only paths I can think of are a major expansion of OpenAI and a major expansion of Tesla AI. Perhaps both simultaneously"

            Feb 3, 2018 DX-754: Sam Teller says Elon "just suggested we use SpaceX email for AI stuff so switching over to that"

            Feb 4, 2018 DX-755: Sam Teller and Shivon Zilis discuss disabling Openai

            Feb 20, 2018 DX-770: Elon officially leaves board (first document I see specifying)

        • andrei_says_ 2 hours ago

          I sometimes wonder, what does one need a second 500 billion that the first 500 billion is not enough for?

          • knicholes an hour ago

            Getting to Mars, it would seem.

            • hdndjsbbs an hour ago

              Does anyone seriously still believe this? I thought as a society we had realized Musk is simply BSing whatever he feels like until it becomes untenable.

              • dogscatstrees an hour ago

                Oh, you mean like:

                Solar Roof: https://electrek.co/2026/05/14/tesla-solar-roof-promise-vs-r...

                Tesla Full Self Driving: https://electrek.co/2026/05/18/musk-unsupervised-fsd-widespr...

                Hyperloop / Boring Company mass-transit vision

                Mars settlement timelines

                X as an everything app

              • JumpCrisscross an hour ago

                > Does anyone seriously still believe this?

                I do. It’s not his singular focus. But he continues to personally invest himself in pushing the boundaries of human spacefaring capability. That goal seems more personally invested to him that it does to e.g. Bezos, who mostly has a rocket company to look cool.

                • awesome_dude 23 minutes ago

                  I know there's a risk when Musk's name comes up that everyone takes "all against" or "all for" approach - very polarising figure.

                  But I see a lot of that announcement, and the others someone else pointed to as his "aspirational, but ultimately never going to happen" goals - whether he believes the claims are achievable, or not, he says these things to energise people to working/paying for him to try

                  It costs him little to nothing to say, and other people's time, effort, and capital to try (and succeed/fail)

                  Tesla is falling to pieces now, and SpaceX is getting loaded up with completely unrelated projects (xAI) in order to try and make it look saleable (I guess) - it's very difficult to see the Mars announcement as anything but hype.

          • DoesntMatter22 35 minutes ago

            To build more cool stuff. Would be great if he did neurolink for cancer

          • lotsofpulp an hour ago

            Because money is just a proxy for power, and the goal is not to have cash, it is to have power. Perhaps via being able to make decisions at various businesses, or being able to travel to a different planet, or being able to influence other people, etc.

            Could also partly be a curiosity to see what one is capable of, or maybe wanting to be known for helming an organization that accomplishes xyz.

          • lovich an hour ago

            Because he is an addict and one of his addictions is money

            • testplzignore an hour ago

              Maybe he trying to collect every waifu from every gacha game. That would get expensive in a hurry.

          • robocat an hour ago

            Why did he need a second 250 billion after the first 250 billion? Makes me think of a inverted Zeno's paradox.

            Why do you need an extra dollar?

            I can answer for myself: New Zealand plans to tax the shit out of anyone that has more[A].

            You need a fukton more than median wealth to be able to protect yourself against your own government.

            The type of person that enjoys chasing money doesn't stop.

            [A] via capital gains taxes and wealth taxes. Also one needs an excessive amount more to handle progressive taxation and means testing.

            • KaiserPro 22 minutes ago

              > I can answer for myself: New Zealand plans to tax the shit out of anyone that has more[A].

              New Zeeland is an outlier in that it doesn't have capital gains tax.

              Its not the end of the world to have captial gains tax.

            • rolph an hour ago

              "Why did he need a second 250 billion after the first 250 billion"

              because thats another 250 billion less for a competitor to use against you.

            • awesome_dude 41 minutes ago

              Why did you turn that into a whine about a tax that exists in 31 of 38 OECD economies?

              Go to Australia where you pay a stamp duty for buying (to pay for infra) and a CGT for selling

              Edit: Changed stamp tax to stamp duty

            • jamiek88 an hour ago

              > Why did he need a second 250 billion after the first 250 billion?

              Because billionaires are mentally unwell.

            • danaris 21 minutes ago

              Yeah, no, this is bullshit.

              You can't just apply One Simple Rule like this ("more money is always better" / "more money never makes a difference"). There is, objectively, an amount of money above which another dollar, or another billion, will never make a meaningful difference in your overall lifestyle[0].

              The amount isn't a single bright line, but like with so many things, there's an area below it where extra money unquestionably improves your quality of life, and an area above it where it unquestionably doesn't.

              [0] unless "your lifestyle" involves manipulating major governments and controlling the way people the world over think, which I wouldn't consider a legitimate part of "lifestyle"

    • bambax 2 hours ago

      I'm unfamiliar with the US legal system but do they really need a jury and a trial to determine whether the claims are barred by the statute of limitations? Couldn't this be decided by a judge before trial?

      • compiler-guy 2 hours ago

        Part of the Statute of Limitations isn't just on when he filed the claim, but when he found out or should have found out, by reasonable diligence that he had a claim at all.

        So the question before the jury has a significant component of "Should he have found out by this time?" Which is a question of fact, and facts are typically decided by juries, in the US at least.

        The two parties can agree together to let a judge decide facts like this, but generally, if one or the other party wants it to go to a jury, it does.

        I'm guessing part of Musk's strategy was to have it go to the jury, which are often seen as easier to manipulate than judges, especially when a case is weak. Or perhaps his team already knew this particular judge would be inclined to rule against him, so did the next best thing.

      • CSMastermind 2 hours ago

        Elon argued that even though the events in question took place sometime between 2017 and 2020 OpenAI intentionally hid the information from him until 2022-2023 which is why he wasn't able to file the lawsuit until 2024.

        That's what the jury found against - they said he was reasonably informed enough to have brought the suit earlier and thus the 3 year clock should start ticking in 2020 not 2023.

      • ai-x 4 minutes ago

        That's like saying can't the Judge decide who the killer was when he literally saw the video of shooting.

      • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

        In the US, judges make determinations of law, but juries (in a jury trial at least) must evaluate the evidence to make findings of fact. So the jury would need to make a finding as to when the statute of limitations started ticking based on the evidence, and the judge then makes the legal determination that the statutory period has lapsed.

      • cwmma 2 hours ago

        In the American system juries figure out questions of fact and judges figure out questions of law.

        In this case I guess the question was 'when did the incident actually happen' with Elon arguing it was later then Altman.

      • prepend 2 hours ago

        In this case the judge determined that it did require a trial and refused to dismiss based on statute of limitations.

    • jmyeet 2 hours ago

      For people unfamiliar, generally speaking in trial courts the jury is the finder of facts and the judge is the finder of law (yes, there are bench trials where the judge does both). As an aside, appeals courts deal in legal issues (ie statutory interpretations and constitutional issues).

      So not being within the statute of limitations is typically a legal issue so what must've happened here is the jury would've been asked if the earlier OpenAI-MS deals were substantially similar to the latest deal. I can't find the verdict form or the jury instructions but I'll bet that was the key issue the jury decided.

    • Arodex 3 hours ago

      >Musk could have brought the same lawsuit in 2019 or 2021, meaning his claims were untimely for the 3 year statute of limitations.

      Why is a hypothetical ground for this decision? "You didn't complain immediately the first time you got robbed, therefore all the robbing since then is covered by a statute of limitation".

      • granzymes 3 hours ago

        The statute of limitations exists to prevent unreasonable delay, to protect defendants from prejudice due to loss of evidence to the passage of time, and to recognize that people who are injured tend to complain immediately and not sit on their claims.

        This case demonstrates why. Musk only complained after OpenAI was commercially successful with ChatGPT and after he started a competing effort. He repeatedly said “I do not know” and “I do not recall” on the stand, and argued that the passage of time made it hard for him to remember facts that would have been helpful for OpenAI.

        • Arodex 3 hours ago

          I know why statutes of limitation exist. I was wondering why it applied here. Apparently it wasn't completely straightforward, as nine jurors were needed to reach a decision on that point, instead of a single judge or even clerk.

          • granzymes 3 hours ago

            Whether the claim accrued before the statute of limitations expired is a question of fact, and is therefore reserved for the fact-finder which in this case was the jury.

            • toast0 3 hours ago

              IMHO, whether (and which) statue of limitations applies is a question of law, whether said time limit has passed is a question of fact. I'd like to read the jury instructions and verdict, but I didn't see a link to them anywhere.

              I guess there could be a question of fact in a case where the statues of limitation differ for different injuries, and the factual question is which injury was it.

              • granzymes 2 hours ago

                You are correct that which statute of limitations applies is a question of law. If facts are undisputed, that is the end of the issue. In this case, the facts were disputed, and the jury found for the defendants.

                The jury instructions are public and the final jury form will be published, likely later this week.

                I can tell you that the instructions told the jury to decide whether Musk could have brought his case before 2021.

            • ryandrake 2 hours ago

              It seems to me like justice should be about right vs wrong and illegal vs legal, and not “did you fill out form 27B/6 on time?” Dismissing a case on these kinds of trivial procedural grounds seems like the court just doesn’t want to do its job.

              • granzymes 2 hours ago

                The statute of limitations is not a trivial issue. Defendants have rights just as much as plaintiffs do, and our justice system does not allow plaintiffs to unreasonably delay in bringing their claims.

                • bobthepanda 33 minutes ago

                  there are also practical concerns at play with a statute of limitations, where evidence is more likely to disappear and the trial would've devolved into a he said/she said situation.

              • dbt00 2 hours ago

                If it was wrong in 2019, why did he wait 7 years to do something about it?

                The passage of time makes it harder to have a fair trial, as shown by the number of times Elon said I don't know or I don't recall about conversations that would have been recent in 2019 but are now long (or strategically) forgotten.

                • dzhiurgis an hour ago

                  Why would you try to sue something that has no chance of being alive?

              • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

                Bringing claims promptly so they can be adjudicated is vital for justice. What would you think if you were sued for something that happened decades ago when the time to correct it was soon after the instigating event?

              • brookst 25 minutes ago

                So you’d be OK if, say, a rental car sued you for putative damage to a car you rented 15 years ago?

                Limiting time that an action can be brought is critical to having a fair trial.

              • danso 13 minutes ago

                How do you imagine justice functioning in a system that lacks a statute of limitations?

              • geodel 2 hours ago

                It doesn't seem trivial at all. Allowing to flout procedure specially in case of very rich , powerful people with vast resources at their disposal would feel rewarding further for their cluelessness as if they are not already heavily rewarded by rigged system.

              • albedoa an hour ago

                I for one am happy that we have and enforce statutes of limitations. Calling it a kind of "trivial procedural grounds" is wild.

                > the court just doesn’t want to do its job.

                What do you think its job is.

          • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

            In the US, court clerks do not decide cases. This was a jury trial, so the jury was required to do its job.

      • joshkel 2 hours ago

        https://localnewsmatters.org/2026/05/16/musk-v-altman-week-3... has a good explanation of the legalities:

        "If the jury determines that at any time before those dates, Musk either knew — or had or should have known — that he had a claim that he could bring, then his suit was brought too late. The consequence of being too late is swift and absolute. If the lawsuit was filed late for a particular claim, that claim is out of the case; if it was too late for all of Musk’s claims, the lawsuit is over."

        That's where the question of fact (i.e., the requirement for a jury decision) came in: "What was the statute of limitations?" is a question of law, but "When should Musk have known that OpenAI was moving too much toward for-profit?" is a question of fact (and, here, determines whether the statute of limitations applies).

      • chipsrafferty 3 hours ago

        There are multiple reasons why statutes of limitations exist, one of them being that the further away in time, the harder it is to prove evidence. Witnesses may have died, or their memory may be more faulty.

        • hnfong 3 hours ago

          Also criminal liability is generally handled differently. Some jurisdictions have no limit, and where the limits exist for criminal liability, limitations on serious crimes can be much longer than the civil ones.

      • kstrauser 3 hours ago

        Because there has to be some point. It's unjust to allow someone to sue 30 years later, as everyone would have a sword of Damocles hanging over their head waiting for the right moment to strike. And in general, if you didn't realize you were robbed for 3 years, perhaps it's the case that you weren't actually robbed.

        • skeptic_ai 3 hours ago

          So if I exchange your Rolex with a fake one and then you try to sell after 3 years and you notice it’s fake, it’s fine for you?

          • granzymes 3 hours ago

            The statute of limitations takes into account when the plaintiff discovered or with reasonable diligence should have discovered their injury.

            In this case, the jury found that Musk knew or should have known of his alleged injury prior to 2021.

          • eftychis 3 hours ago

            There is the notion of equitable estoppel, that would *perhaps*, depending on the facts, apply which stops a defendant, who for instance concealed or committed certain acts of fraud, from raising the statute of limitations defense.

            Edit: to augment the sibling comment.

      • hn_acc1 3 hours ago

        This is not a robbery, though. Not in the "break in and steal stuff from your house multiple times" situation. Legally, each of those are separate events, and one doesn't really affect the other unless it's all the same person, and the repetition is used to get a stronger case, etc.

      • jmyeet 2 hours ago

        There are several legal principles in play here. Note that these are civil trial issues and when you're talking about "robbing", you're likely talking about a criminal issue. These are:

        1. Estoppel. If a party relies on your conduct then you can lose the right to sue over it;

        2. Laches. This is a defense against prejudicial conduct, typically by waiting too long to take action;

        3. Waiver. Your conduct can waive your right to sue. Imagine you live with someone and they don't pay half of the rent so you cover it. At some point your continued conduct means you lose the right to sue; and

        4. The statute of limitations. Some claims simply have to be brought within a certain period. How this applies can be really complex. For example, we saw this in Trump's fraud convictions in New York. His time in office, away from the jurisdiction, essentially suspended the statute of limitations.

        Some crimes like murder have no statute of limitations. Others have unreasonably short statutes of limitations. For example, probably nobody can be charged in relation to sex trafficking in the Epstein saga because the statute of limitations is often 5 years with such crimes. This is unreasonable (IMHO) because often the victims are children and unable to make a criminal complaint.

        It's also worth adding that not all legal systems have such wide-ranging statutes of limitation as the US does. Founding principles of those other legal systems is that the government shouldn't be arbitrarily restricted for prosecuting criminal conduct. The US system ostensibly favors "timely" prosecution.

    • john_builds 3 hours ago

      thanks for the snippet

    • bflesch 2 hours ago

      If it's thrown out on a technicality then Musk got fleeced by his lawyers - good for them.

  • mustaphah 3 hours ago

    The strongest evidence against Musk was Musk. His own 2017 emails supporting for-profit chats made the "betrayal" narrative very hard to sell.

    • dzonga 3 hours ago

      Muskys problem is does things in the moment as a way to increase popularity without thinking that end up bitting him.

      e.g the twitter thing - forced to buy when he didn't want.

      • Freedom2 3 hours ago

        I wonder if a more "hardcore" team, by his words, would have handled this legal case better?

        • rufo 3 hours ago

          My understanding is that the case was flimsy enough that no "hardcore" lawyers wanted to represent him. It's not just a matter of money; their record (and, therefore, future earnings) are on the line.

        • nkozyra an hour ago

          A more "hardcore" team will keep telling him he can win on appeals, and bill accordingly.

        • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

          His case was handled as well as any lawyer could have. He signed the deal and then tried to change his mind. That's not how contracts work, and the legal system and status quo have strong interests in keeping it that way.

      • exe34 3 hours ago

        To be fair, twitter ended up useful for him when he used it to buy his way into the US government and close down all the departments that were investigating his companies for breaking all sorts of laws.

        • bonesss 3 hours ago

          As a business transaction: Twitters acquisition is among the worst deals in human history.

          As means to buy an election an Presidency: highly efficient use of capital with an undeniable short and long-term ROI.

          • nebula8804 3 hours ago

            Too early to write closing arguments on this. A vengeful future administration might make us realize that the entire transaction was a huge mistake.

            • SwellJoe 32 minutes ago

              I don't know where a vengeful future administration would come from. We only have Democrats or Republicans to choose from, and Democrats have made turning the other cheek their entire purpose and political mission. They slow-rolled the investigation of Trump so long he got elected again in the meantime. The idea that any major Democrat would go after a billionaire and not just any billionaire but the biggest billionaire of them all? Absurd thought.

            • MBCook 3 hours ago

              True. There is a “so far” on that.

          • BeetleB 3 hours ago

            > Twitters acquisition is among the worst deals in human history.

            That he won't have to pay for. Shareholders will, as part of the SpaceX IPO.

            • aniviacat 3 hours ago

              If shareholders have to pay the debt, then the shares will be less valuable, and Musk (whose wealth is measured in shares) will be less wealthy, no?

              • BeetleB 3 hours ago

                By a tad. SpaceX's worth is an order of magnitude more than Twitter's debt. I doubt any serious person considering buying shares in SpaceX will spend even a moment worrying about Twitter.

                • ben_w 2 hours ago

                  They probably should. I've seen people concerned a subsidiary's GDPR fine would be calculated on the basis of the parent company's global revenue, and in Musk's case something similar has happened in Brazil where Starlink's assets were frozen and justified in part because of how Musk fails to properly delineate between his businesses.

                  • generj an hour ago

                    The EU also lacks incentivizes to not harm SpaceX. The US government as a whole, and DoD in particular wants SpaceX around to deliver cheap mass to orbit.

                    Europe on the other hand would love any judgements which give their rockets a chance to catchup. So they won’t temper an investigation or fines accordingly.

              • saalweachter 2 hours ago

                Musk only owns 42% of SpaceX; he only takes 42% of the loss as if he continued to own Twitter outright.

                • nkozyra an hour ago

                  Well Twitter has other investors, too.

                  But he'll also likely be shaving equity here and there along the way to hedge this bet.

        • ngruhn 3 hours ago

          On the other hand, buying twitter was the turning point for his public image. Before that, he was Tony Stark. Now he's Lex Luthor.

          • nebula8804 3 hours ago

            Key word being public. People from the industries he operates in were screaming from the rooftops about him for years. Tech people chose to actively ignore their colleagues in automotive and space. I remember the circumstances that led to the creation of /r/realtesla.

            • mschuster91 2 hours ago

              > People from the industries he operates in were screaming from the rooftops about him for years. Tech people chose to actively ignore their colleagues in automotive and space.

              The thing is... SpaceX and Tesla actually delivered something, in the case of Tesla at least until that damn rust bucket. They were (and, with the exception of the rust bucket, still are) miles ahead of the competition.

              Back when Musk proposed buying Twitter, the site already was in the gutters, there's a reason that place was up for sale. Bugs littered everywhere, reliability issues, the disaster that was the universally hated 2019 redesign, sex spam bots, trolls and propaganda farms running the show, the "legitimate" bluecheck verification program being all but dead for new applicants. People actually hoped that Musk would turn the sinking ship around.

              What even those critical of Musk didn't expect was that he'd open all the floodgates.

              • jandrese 2 hours ago

                > Back when Musk proposed buying Twitter, the site already was in the gutters, there's a reason that place was up for sale. Bugs littered everywhere, reliability issues, the disaster that was the universally hated 2019 redesign, sex spam bots, trolls and propaganda farms running the show

                I'm guessing you have not checked out modern X/Twitter if you think Musk has managed to evict the bots, trolls, propaganda firms, or even sex workers. The only difference now is they have blue checks and get pushed to the top of the feed.

                Any of the struggles old Twitter had are absolutely dwarfed by its current problems. They still lose money hand over fist, the noise floor is way higher than it used to be, and a solid majority of the best users have either left or simulpost their content on other platforms like Mastadon and Bluesky. The new blue check system is close to an outright disaster, the only saving grace being that you can filter out the worst of the trolls by installing an extension that filters out blue check users.

                > The thing is... SpaceX and Tesla actually delivered something, in the case of Tesla at least until that damn rust bucket. They were (and, with the exception of the rust bucket, still are) miles ahead of the competition.

                For SpaceX this is true, but for Tesla the competition has caught up and in some cases surpassed them. The supercharger network used to be the envy of all other EV companies, but ever since Musk randomly threw a fit and fired the management a few years back the system has stagnated and modern 800V competitors are making them look like fools. Elon's big bet on Full Self Driving has yet to pay off as the deadline for getting it to actually work as advertised continues to slip and it's not clear when if ever unsupervised Full Self Driving will be available, especially on vehicles with older hardware. People paid thousands of dollars for it and Tesla has yet to deliver on the promise. Remember it was supposed to be live in 2021. Even more prosaic things like the 200+ mile total range and integrated route planning are effectively standard features across the EV landscape. Tesla had 3 or 4 years where they stood head and shoulders over the competition, but those days are gone.

              • HWR_14 an hour ago

                > there's a reason that place was up for sale.

                It was "up for sale" because it was a public company. Tesla is also "up for sale" by that definition.

              • dylan604 2 hours ago

                > The thing is... SpaceX and Tesla actually delivered something, in the case of Tesla at least until that damn rust bucket. They were (and, with the exception of the rust bucket, still are) miles ahead of the competition

                The fact that the quote of "it's all computer" is not wrong with all of the other negatives about it are automotive reasons why I'll never own one. I also choose not to do business with companies with that kind of leadership. A noble idea like by an ignoble person does not bode well for that noble idea.

              • watwut 10 minutes ago

                > Back when Musk proposed buying Twitter, the site already was in the gutters, there's a reason that place was up for sale. Bugs littered everywhere, reliability issues, the disaster that was the universally hated 2019 redesign, sex spam bots, trolls and propaganda farms running the show

                Frankly, bullshit. It worked reliably, extremely so. It had remarkably few bugs too. It was also actually doing way better financially. It was not perfect ... but all the issues you claim it had became massively more worst.

                Musk bought it for political reasons, to stomp down on left leaning opposition and networks that were well functioning there. That part was a success, it is a nazi site now and helped Trump win elections.

          • Jcowell an hour ago

            No by then his public image would have be damaged by the cave diver incident

          • hn_acc1 3 hours ago

            Is he though? I find he still has a STRONG positive image among younger tech people..

            • CamperBob2 2 hours ago

              A lot of young people are coming of age with the worst imaginable role models to emulate, from politics to business. This is going to become obvious soon enough, I imagine.

              I'm very glad I'm not responsible for raising children these days.

          • ben_w 2 hours ago

            Nah, too much hair to be Luthor. Bezos is Luthor: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umBuxoLHV6M

            Ironically, I'd say that Musk is still Stark, in a lot of bad ways: both show narcissism, overconfidence, impulsivity, ego-driven decision making, control issues, disregard for consequences, and volatility.

          • the_doctah 3 hours ago

            And all he really did was gut the censorship engine.

            • pesus 3 hours ago

              Is that what we're calling allowing CSAM and promoting white supremacist rhetoric?

        • dylan604 2 hours ago

          Did the total of fines the US gov't was looking to levy on Musk total up to more than the $44Billion he spent on Twitter?

          • robofanatic an hour ago

            $44B is peanuts for a soon to be trillionaire

            • dylan604 an hour ago

              Doesn't make it a good deal. Just means he can afford to make bad deals.

              • dlev_pika 33 minutes ago

                This is part of what people miss about poverty - it’s incredibly unforgiving.

                By contrast, the more money you have the more mistakes you can afford to make

          • exe34 2 hours ago

            When you are the richest man in the world, you can afford to do things out of spite. But we won't know - he got rid of the people who could have fined him.

            • dylan604 an hour ago

              It just seems highly unlikely the USG would issue a >$44Billion dollar set of fines to anybody.

      • tahoeskibum 3 hours ago

        Did you read the article:"...that his lawsuits had been filed too late."

      • outside2344 3 hours ago

        And the Trump thing, which cratered his car business

        • shimman 3 hours ago

          Yeah but he was able to personally make the call to kill millions of people around the world, he's just going back to his roots.

          • the_doctah 3 hours ago

            Needs context otherwise you appear hysterical.

            • dlev_pika 32 minutes ago

              Not to anyone with basic grasp of what USAID did or was

            • doron 2 hours ago

              The results of DOGE

              A former USAID global health official has cited internal modeling suggesting around 600,000 excess deaths in 2025 alone, roughly two‑thirds among children, due to the collapse of programs for malnutrition, HIV, TB, obstetric care, and child health.

              https://hsph.harvard.edu/news/usaid-shutdown-has-led-to-hund...

              USAID global health and development funding has been cut by on the order of 80–85%, sharply reducing support for vaccination, TB control, maternal health, and other essential services in many poorer countries.

              Within CDC, DOGE‑related cuts and mass firings have removed thousands of staff, with specific centers (e.g., National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention) losing over a quarter of their workforce.

              Short term: more outbreaks like the Bangladesh measles surge, interrupted treatment for chronic and infectious diseases, and increased mortality where programs were heavily donor‑funded.

              Medium term: degradation of global health infrastructure and human capital (loss of trained staff, data systems, and labs), making it harder to recover even if funding later returns.

              Long term: slower medical innovation, reduced global surveillance capacity, and entrenched health inequities, as countries and communities with the fewest resources bear the brunt of lost support.

              https://www.npr.org/sections/goats-and-soda/2025/07/01/nx-s1...

            • catlifeonmars 2 hours ago

              What does “hysterical” mean in this context?

              • shimman 2 hours ago

                "I disagree with you and have zero awareness of the world around me."

            • shimman 2 hours ago

              Yeah canceling USAID programs that made the difference between life and death for millions of people around the world. Were you in a coma during DOGE in 2025 or are you being purposely selective in your memory?

              Nothing hysterical about killing millions of people, hopefully there becomes a movement in the US to not only try Elon Musk at say the International Criminal Court (which we all know will lead to successful conviction, the evidence is apparent and naked enough as is) but hopefully the US government nationalizes his assets as he is a danger to the world.

              Also the US should start throwing some oligarchs in prison to help rehabilitate its image after people start blaming us for causing famines and more deaths due to the recent imperial project that has become a total shit show.

              https://hsph.harvard.edu/news/usaid-shutdown-has-led-to-hund...

              "If founding is not restored by 2030, 8 to 10 million people will die."

              If Harvard is too woke for you here's a youtube interview:

              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJ8wm5PTKJg

              If Youtube is too woke for you, here's the book detailing this as well:

              https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/243105542-into-the-wood-...

              If books are woke for you, maybe just go back into your cave where concern trolling is more respected.

          • blurbleblurble 3 hours ago

            I don't believe in racial essentialism myself but I know someone who does

            *ducks to dodge downvotes for not only making a bad dad joke but a political one*

        • CamperBob2 2 hours ago

          Obviously Trump was not going to be a champion of clean, renewable energy. If he knew the "Trump thing" was coming -- which thanks to his position inside Twitter he probably did -- then the rational thing to do was, in fact, what he did. Suck up to Trump to try to avoid or shape the outcome.

          What he didn't need to do was alienate his existing customers by acting like he enjoyed it. Did he actually think he was going to sell a lot of EVs to Trumpers?

      • mustaphah 3 hours ago

        Extreme smartness has its own failure modes

        • SimianSci 2 hours ago

          After the many years, there have been insider voices indicating that success was despite Musk in many ways. Musk bought his way into cutting edge tech, it succeeded despite him due to the already amazing people working in the industries. The projects that have his actual involvement are pretty regularly seen as mistakes or flops.

          I personally hold to the idea that whoever at SpaceX crafted the team used to pre-occupy Musk and keep him entertained while the rest of the company worked, is largely responsible for its success.

          • dlev_pika 29 minutes ago

            I heard this was a thing at Tesla, figure out how to redirect while the grown ups were actually building stuff

        • tombert 3 hours ago

          I'm not convinced he's all that smart. Space datacenters seems like an unbelievably stupid idea to me, and I cannot imagine anyone who is ostensibly surrounded by tech seriously considering it. Well, no one sober anyway.

          • peterfirefly 2 hours ago

            It's a lot less dumb if you can drastically reduce the launch costs AND drastically increase the launch mass and size. If the Starship thing works out, he will have achieved that.

            It's also a lot less dumb if you can make your chips work well at higher temperatures.

            It's also a lot less dumb if you can space harden your chips better than anybody else can at the moment. This is what the Terafab thing is about (for now). Not about pumping out insane amounts of chips but about doing practical R&D for chips that work better in space: hardening and higher temperatures.

            Such chips would also be useful for Starlink/Starshield and for Starship itself.

            Putting something similar to Akamai/Cloudflare up there would work very well with Starlink. If the costs could be made low enough, of course.

            Will it make any sense whatsoever for AI training? Not unless he manages to scale a whole lot of things drastically, and probably not even then. It might make sense for AI inference in a few years, though. Faster inference responses (via Starlink) might be worth some money.

            • johneth 15 minutes ago

              So it's a lot less dumb if 50 really difficult and borderline physically impossible things happen. On the word of a conman. Right.

            • tombert an hour ago

              > It's a lot less dumb if you can drastically reduce the launch costs AND drastically increase the launch mass and size. If the Starship thing works out, he will have achieved that.

              No, it's still dumb.

              No matter how cheap they manage to make SpaceX launches realistically, there's really no situation that a space datacenter makes any sense compared to putting datacenters in, for example, Antarctica. If they built in Antarctica, it would still be cheaper than launching into orbit. You'd have lots of free cold air to potentially cool the computers, and you wouldn't need trained astronauts to fix things when things break. I dont' even think that building a datacenter in Antarctica is a good idea, I'm just saying it's less dumb than launching into space.

              Even if you make CPUs that are able to work at a hotter temperature, you still have to contend with the fact that space is effectively one giant insulator and these CPUs cannot work at infinitely high temperatures no matter what.

              Even for something like Akamai space data centers are a dumb idea. Keep in mind, this would be space, where people can't easily get to, so you'd need considerably more physical servers to be installed in order to have fault tolerance. Even if the servers weighed nothing, which they wouldn't, you'd need to power them, and in order to power that many servers you'd need solar arrays considerably larger than the ISS.

              And what exactly would this buy you? Slightly lower latency for Starlink? With a potentially spotty connection, I'm not even convinced on that; I suspect any latency savings you'd have would be eaten by retries when packages drop.

              Outside of a neatness factor, I just don't see exactly would be won by doing this compared to just setting up gigantic solar array in the middle of large deserts and building here on earth. You know, the planet we live on, where technicians can go and repair things in datacenters, because servers break all the fucking time, and these technicians don't have to get into a rocket to do that.

              • pfdietz 16 minutes ago

                > No matter how cheap they manage to make SpaceX launches realistically, there's really no situation that a space datacenter makes any sense compared to putting datacenters in, for example, Antarctica.

                Solar energy is going to expensive in Antarctica.

                We can imagine a situation where the server hardware becomes so cheap that the energy cost dominates. In that case, sticking the things in space could make sense, particularly if extremely low mass space PV (just a few microns thick) can be made to work and also work cheaply.

              • baggy_trough an hour ago

                It gets you out of the reach of the suffocating regulatory states here on Earth.

                • johneth 12 minutes ago

                  Are you forgetting that you need to launch from one of those "suffocating regulatory states"?

                • tombert an hour ago

                  If it's something that could even realistically be done, which again I don't actually concede based on what I said before, then maybe it would have slightly less regulation.

                  Or, and hear me out, Elon is just a drug addict who makes shit up based on his 12-year-old-boy fantasies because it sounds neat and investors just eat it up.

            • gamblor956 an hour ago

              It's actually more dumb if you can manage all of the things to make this farce successful, because high-temperature chips that don't require cooling would work even better on Earth than in space because the temperature resistance could be combined with ambient cooling, and there are far more valuable (and longer-lasting) things that could be launched with greater launch mass efficiency.

              Also...hardened electronics have been a thing for decades. It's not big because shielding is cheaper and far more effective. The only practical use is military, and there are already DoD suppliers who are generations ahead of SpaceX on the hardened chip front.

          • mustaphah an hour ago

            > I'm not convinced he's all that smart

            We probably disagree on the meaning of "smartness"

            • tombert an hour ago

              I'm not even sure I'm willing to concede he's smart by any definition of the word.

              I guess he's good at making shit up and making his investors forget his failed promises? I guess that requires some level of intelligence.

    • jjordan 3 hours ago

      There was no decision made on this basis. It was dismissed entirely due to the elapsed statute of limitations.

    • ls612 3 hours ago

      He lost the lawsuit on a legal technicality about the statute of limitations not on substantive grounds.

  • asadm an hour ago

    I feel like there still needs to be a penalty to OpenAI here even if that doesn't favor Musk (even though he funded the whole thing). It is still a theft.

    • david927 4 minutes ago

      My theory is this civil suit was used to expose Sam's (and Greg's) self-dealing and perjury. This was civil, now comes criminal.

    • greenpizza13 39 minutes ago

      Need standing to claim theft, need to be within statue of limitations.

      It's not theft unless a jury says it is, they didn't say it is.

  • tahoeskibum 3 hours ago

    Anybody read the article:"...that his lawsuits had been filed too late."

    • pj_mukh 3 hours ago

      Wait but that’s the crux of his argument that he was “wronged”. Not “wronged but only once xAI started competing with OpenAI”. He can’t prove the former, if the latter is true.

      If anyone is/was truly still wronged by OpenAI changing corporate structure they are still able to sue and prove damages. Yet surprisingly no one has come forward on this.

      • lqstuart 2 hours ago

        Maybe one of the scientists who cashed out 8 figures will file a suit that OpenAI has wronged them by depriving them of the joy of working

      • gamblor956 an hour ago

        Nobody else has come forward because the number of people with a potential legal claim for asserting any such harm was a small group of between 2 and 6 people, of which Musk was one (setting aside SOL issues).

    • modeless 3 hours ago

      Yeah people are going to make up a lot of reasons why Elon lost that have nothing to do with the actual and very simple reason.

    • dcow 3 hours ago

      Right. Nobody cares whether Musk won or lost (well maybe a few do). People actually following the case wanted to know whether OpenAI would be held in any way accountable for anything. And this “resolution” does not satisfy. Before Musk got involved, what happened at OpenAI was a BigProblem for many people.

  • 2b3a51 3 hours ago

    Reached for comment by TechCrunch, Musk’s lead counsel Marc Toberoff said, “One word: Appeal.”

    One wonders on what grounds?

    In the UK, in a civil case like this, the judge I think comments on the likelihood of an appeal avenue once the verdict has been reached.

    • ryandrake 3 hours ago

      To be fair, is there any corporation or high net worth individual ever who, after losing a lawsuit, said “You know what, we accept the court’s decision that we were wrong and will be reflecting on how to do better in the future.”

      Never. That never ever happens.

    • Legend2440 3 hours ago

      On the grounds of "I have infinite money and lawyers to drag this thing out forever, whether I'll win or not."

      • 2b3a51 3 hours ago

        Nothing like 'vexatious litigation' in the US?

        https://www.gov.uk/guidance/vexatious-litigants

        • Legend2440 3 hours ago

          There is, but it's a pretty high bar to clear. Merely exhausting one's appeals does not qualify as vexatious. He could keep going for years as long as his lawyers make vaguely plausible arguments each time.

    • shdh 8 minutes ago

      Two words: “billable hours”

    • artninja1988 3 hours ago

      To any lawyers in here, is there an argument to be made for the statue of limitations not to apply here

      • gamblor956 an hour ago

        No. Once the jury made its finding of fact as to when the event giving rise to the claim occurred (and to when the SOL clock would start ticking), the appeal would have to determine that the jury could not have reasonably made such a finding. It's very, very rare for an appeals court to overturn a finding of fact.

    • duskwuff 3 hours ago

      > One wonders on what grounds?

      Invent a time machine; send a lawyer back to file a new lawsuit within the statute of limitations.

    • colechristensen 3 hours ago

      He lost on the grounds of a statue of limitations defense which is exactly the kind of thing which is easily appealable.

      • qyph 3 hours ago

        Are you a lawyer? IANAL but my understanding is it would be difficult for an appeal to succeed. Appeals courts only evaluate review matters of law, not of fact. Whether is has been more than the 3 year limit the statute of limitations places is a matter of fact I think. And the advisory jury makes this much harder to appeal. What do you think the grounds for appeal will be?

        • colechristensen 3 hours ago

          I'm not saying it will succeed, but what counts as having passed the statue of limitations and various workarounds and modifications of the time period particularly in cases like this where the acts in question weren't necessarily a single event but progressive activity is the kind of question which is the bread and butter of an appeals court.

      • frankchn 3 hours ago

        In this case, I think it is a jury's finding of fact re: the statute of limitations. Unless the appellate court finds that the trial court and jury is clearly erroneous, it will usually give significant deference to that finding.

        • dctoedt 3 hours ago

          It's even harder than "clearly erroneous" (the standard applied when a judge makes fact findings without a jury). Under the Seventh Amendment, if a hypothetical reasonable jury could have reached the result that the actual jury did, then that's the ball game [0], even if the trial judge or appellate-court judges would have reached a different result.

          [0] Assuming that the trial judge didn't materially screw up in admitting or excluding evidence, or in instructing the jury about the law, and also assuming no proof of juror bias or improper influence.

      • gamblor956 an hour ago

        A state of limitations case is actually one of the strongest kinds of legal defenses a defendant can have.

        It's a foundational issue that goes to whether the court is even allowed to proceed with the case. A defendant could be guilty/liable/whatever of the alleged claims, and it wouldn't matter. If the statute of limitations has run, they're in the clear.

        The only counter to an SOL defense is to try and claim that the SOL was paused for some reason, but those exceptions are very narrow and wouldn't apply here (and in the real world very rarely apply to civil cases).

      • enraged_camel 3 hours ago

        Pretty sure it's the opposite: appeals mostly only work when the decision is not clear cut, and the statute of limitations is.

    • pixl97 3 hours ago

      Typically if they bring up a case like this a judge again will get pissy and dismiss it with prejudice.

      You can try to file it again, but that gets to the point where the judge can throw your ass directly in jail for 30 days, do not pass go, do not collect 200 dollars.

      • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago

        Filing the same lawsuit a second time is different. They're talking about appealing the decision in this case. You don't get tossed in jail for that.

        But (at least in the US), the appeals court does not have to accept your appeal. When you file the appeal, you have to give them enough reason for them to even listen to your appeal, instead of rejecting it from the first filing.

  • atom_arranger 3 hours ago

    Aside from the disagreements between these parties, what about the precedent of running a non-profit, and then transferring all IP to a for profit when it’s convenient to do so?

    I wonder if the government or taxpayers have a case to bring regarding that.

    • granzymes 3 hours ago

      This case sets no precedent one way or the other on that question. The IP was transferred to the for-profit for fair value in 2019, and Musk never argued otherwise in this case.

      The attorneys general of California and Delaware could challenge that 2019 IP transfer if they so wished on behalf of the public.

    • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

      Transactions like that happen all the time and are not problematic if handled legally. Any of the interested parties could have sued over it, but none have.

      • atom_arranger 4 minutes ago

        The interested parties would be taxpayers. I think some groups are trying to look into it.

        The issue is that they did R&D as a charity, donations to which are tax deductible, there may also be other benefits to being a charity during R&D but that’s a big one, then once the thing works, setup a for profit, sell ip at “fair value”, get some investment, then things are ready for business.

        I read there’s no statute of limitations on a tax issue like this, so I guess it might be hanging over them indefinitely.

        I’m not a big taxation and government fan, they’d probably just waste the money anyways. It does seem unfair OpenAI gets to use this loophole though, unless all companies can make their R&D investment tax deductible, and get any other benefits of this setup.

      • adrr an hour ago

        Because they got to participate in the early investment in the for profit entity.

        > Early Angels (Reid Hoffman, Peter Thiel, and others): Approximately $10 million invested, current value $1.4 billion. That corresponds to a return of around 140x.

        https://www.trendingtopics.eu/openai-cap-table-leak/

    • Morromist 2 hours ago

      Yeah. I wonder if the question "Did OpenAI steal a non-profit worth what is now maybe hundreds of billions of dollars?" will ever be answered. If not it will be one of the biggest heists in history.

    • gamblor956 an hour ago

      The non-profit received shares in the for-profit as a result of the transfer. Those shares are theoretically worth hundreds of billions.

      If it had been a for-profit company contributing assets to another for-profit company, the transaction would not have had any different tax consequence.

  • aanet an hour ago

    This was one trial where I didn’t want either side to win

    • 100ms an hour ago

      And somehow I still feel worse off that Musk lost?

  • thesdev 3 hours ago

    I hope he appeals. Not cheering for Musk, cheering for the fight.

    • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

      It would just burn more cash unless he can somehow go back in time and change the facts.

      • thesdev 13 minutes ago

        If anyone can afford burning cash for his ego it's the richest man in the world with the biggest ego in the world.

      • hoppyhoppy2 an hour ago

        Yes, and more burnt cash (and hopefully emotional energy) would be an acceptable outcome

    • lapetitejort 2 hours ago

      Cross examination is one of the vanishingly few times you can see billionaires and executives act like human beings instead of sentient PR scripts.

    • enraged_camel 3 hours ago

      There's nothing to appeal. Statute of limitations is... just that.

      • lowkey_ an hour ago

        IANAL but civil statute of limitations is based on when the prosecuting party reasonably discovered they were wronged and had legal recourse, not when the event happened. It is entirely possible to debate when that was in this case.

      • paulpauper 3 hours ago

        For criminal cases at least, the statue of limitations is not set in stone. But probably for civil, its much more cut and dry.

        • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

          Criminal law actually has very specific statutes of limitation as well, depending on the crime.

  • keeda 2 hours ago

    While none of the billionnaires on the stand came across as stellar paragons of virtue, it's hilarious that even they could not stand Elon.

    That said, even though Altman is a shifty dude who's clearly playing a Game of Thrones while all others are playing Capitalism, I am extremely grateful that it's him running OpenAI and not Elon.

    Seeing what Elon has done to Twitter, I shudder to think of what he'd do with ChatGPT. The level of reach and subtle influence he would have is insane. He could do with private chats what he's doing to public discourse, and it would all be invisible.

    On the other hand, seeing what he's done with Grok, it's very likely OpenAI would be where xAI is and would never reach this level of adoption and influence. Which seems to be what most people at OpenAI were really worried about.

  • alok-g 3 hours ago

    The lawsuit side, genuinely asking, how does the for-profit under non-profit setup work? What are the respective roles? Is the combination effectively a non-profit still? Or is this some kind of legal loophole to make profits under a non-profit?

    • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

      Lots of non-profits use structures like that, it's not uncommon. Non-profit vs. for-profit is mostly a legal and accounting distinction; many laypeople confuse "non-profit" with "charity" and they are very different.

  • yalogin 2 hours ago

    This should have been thrown away from the start, not sure why it saw a day in court. Musk himsrlf created xAi that is for profit. If he really is concerned about ai his own actions do not show that. This is just regret that he lost control of OpenAI, a trillion dollar company, and nothing more.

  • polalavik an hour ago

    it was probably never about winning for Musk, but to leverage the legal system to air out some drama in open AI and some internal dialogue among the execs of the company for bad press.

  • achatham an hour ago

    The donation was also made through a donor advised fund (DAF), which means Musk didn't legally make the donation. I'm surprised he didn't lose on not having standing.

  • tskj 3 hours ago

    Annoying that it had to be Musk to take this fight, but isn't it very unfortunate that OpenAI is allowed to do this non-profit whoopsie we're now a for-profit thing?

  • jgalt212 3 hours ago

    Who cares if the plaintiff or defendant won? The trial had great expository value regarding all the players involved.

  • paxys 3 hours ago

    > A nine-person jury found that Elon Musk did not bring his lawsuit against OpenAI and Sam Altman until after the expiration of the three-year statute of limitations.

    Intersting outcome. So it's more of a dismissal on technical grounds rather than a complete loss.

    • sdenton4 3 hours ago

      A dismissal on technical grounds, which is also a complete loss.

    • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

      No, it's a complete loss. Much like in engineering, the law considers technical details to be extraordinarily important.

  • cityofdelusion 3 hours ago

    This should clear the path to the IPO and lead to a VERY profitable payday for those holding OpenAI equity. Millionaires and billionaires will be minted ~one year from now.

  • tptacek 3 hours ago

    I think a lot about how there's a very plausible alternate history where Elon Musk controls most of the frontier of AI.

    • Aurornis 3 hours ago

      I've thought about that, too, but it would require that all of the key individuals at OpenAI would have been willing to stay at OpenAI under his ownership.

      That seems unlikely to me given how divisive he is. OpenAI already had one existential leadership crisis without Musk. I doubt it would have fair better under his notoriously difficult leadership. If he had wrestled control away, I would expect an exodus of employees going to new companies.

      • Hikikomori 3 hours ago

        They're willing to work under the current snake, even got him back after he was removed, so why not musk?

        • serial_dev 2 hours ago

          They are both snakes (IMO), but they are different kinds of snakes. I can see why to some Sam is acceptable while Elon wouldn’t be (and vice versa). It’s also convenient to be more lenient toward the snake’s shortcomings when you becoming extremely rich depends on it.

        • saynay 3 hours ago

          Haven't they hemorrhaged a lot of the founding talent in the years since? Now it is full of ex-Meta ad-tech people trying to find a way to make it actually turn a profit.

    • sanderjd 3 hours ago

      There but for the grace of god go we...

    • dragontamer 3 hours ago

      You speak as if Elon Musk didn't buy tons of AI chips for full self driving (Dojo) and COMPLETELY flub it.

      It's the same as always. Musk himself is an awful business man. He relies upon buying the success of others and taking over. Outside of that, he's kind of awful. Initiatives started by Musk himself almost inevitably fail.

      • fastball 3 hours ago

        Tesla wasn't "successful" before he "took it over" (read: invested most of their seed capital and ran the actual day-to-day operations).

        SpaceX, founded entirely by him alone, is also the most valuable space technology company on earth, so...

        • dragontamer 2 hours ago

          Well sure. But that's not AI chips or FSD. The subject of this whole topic.

          Within this realm of AI, Musk has constantly invested and failed. Dojo, xAI, Grok. His newest idea is leveraging SpaceX money to put data centers in Space.

          Good luck with that.

          • fastball an hour ago

            Your previous comment was clearly not constraining itself to the realm of AI chips / FSD. Regardless:

            How do you measure Dojo, xAI, and Grok being failures?

            Dojo is training models for FSD, which is in operation today. The chips in Tesla cars are also taped in-house / vertically integrated, a lot of which is presumably shared investment with the chips needed for the Dojo training side specifically.

            Separating xAI from Grok (in a list like this) is kinda weird, but seems that Grok is actually a very capable LLM, even if it is not best-in-practice. Even if not beating out the top 3 labs, it certainly seems to be in the top 5 by most metrics. The xAI Colossus data centers are real AI training/inference infrastructure that were stood up in record time, and they are now selling capacity to other LLM providers. Is that a failure?

            • dragontamer an hour ago

              https://finance.yahoo.com/news/tesla-shuts-down-dojo-ai-2219...

              Dojo is shutdown dude. Literally doing nothing but rotting. After spending $Billions on a custom chip, Tesla is now just buying NVidia chips and wasting their Dojo efforts entirely

              Team dismantled. Operations closed. Game over.

              ---------

              A similar event is playing out with xAI. Operations are transferring over to SpaceX. Out of money, out of time. They're going to try to grab more money (possibly illegally) across Musks enterprises but there's some severe legal questions on the legality of these moves.

              It's already sketchy as all hell that xAI bought Tesla's GPU fleet. Now SpaceX is buying it up under doubious circumstances.

              Whatever is going on with xAI / Twitter is now clear. It's not possible for it to stand on its own two feet and needs external investors to continue to survive.

      • pizzafeelsright 3 hours ago

        10 years returns S&P 500 (index of all those better than Musk): 261% Tesla: 2700%

        Disclaimer: My portfolio is 65% Tesla.

        • Calavar 3 hours ago

          GME also beat the S&P 500 over the past 10 years. Is this evidence that Ryan Cohen is a business genius?

          Tesla has been a meme stock for about five years now, maybe more. Its valuation correlates with Musk's abilities as a showman and media figure, not a businessman.

          • pizzafeelsright 2 hours ago

            I was responding to the idea Musk is not a good businessman. I think the evidence suggests otherwise.

            Market Cap: Tesla (TSLA): ~$1.4T GameStop (GME): ~$9.7B

            If anything, GME is a meme.

            I also gave my bias so as a way to ignore me.

          • filoleg 3 hours ago

            > GME also beat the S&P 500 over the past 10 years. Is this evidence that Ryan Cohen is a business genius?

            GME did not beat the S&P500 over the past 10 years, and it is just the evidence of you needing to verify your claims before making them.

            Over the past 5 years[0]: S&P500 up by 77%, GME down by 50%.

            Over the past 10 years: S&P500 up by 260%, GME up by 207%.

            GME performance in the past 10 years doesn't indicate that Ryan Cohen is a business genius. It indicates that he runs a company that has been underperforming the market for at least the past decade.

            0. https://www.google.com/finance/beta/quote/.INX:INDEXSP?windo...

            • Calavar 2 hours ago

              I did look up numbers before I made that claim:

              From Yahoo Finance

              GME Jan 1, 2016: $7.09, $5.49 adjusted (accounting for dividend disbursements)

              GME Jan 1, 2026: $20.09

              266% or 365% return depending on how you count dividends. 365% for GME vs. 306% for S&P 500 over the same period (also using adjusted for dividend numbers).

        • Sohcahtoa82 31 minutes ago

          I'd argue that Tesla's stock price is more about con artist acumen than business acumen.

          TSLA currently has a P/E of ~375. That's extremely overvalued. There's no possible objective reason for TSLA to have such an extreme ratio. Even if you think Robotaxi is going to be a massive success, it would have to completely devour Lyft, Uber, and traditional taxi services all combined to even get half way to justifying that P/E, and considering the already major distrust in Tesla's FSD, I just don't see that happening.

          The math doesn't math. People buy TSLA because they want to be part of Elon's cult, not because of anything to do with Tesla as a company.

        • dragontamer 2 hours ago

          So you are personally invested in this and openly admit to it. And yet expect me to take a discussion with you seriously?

          Normally the way this works, is you excuse yourself away from a debate for being too financially involved in the situation, knowing that your financial bias is too overwhelming.

          • pizzafeelsright 2 hours ago

            I do not expect you to take me seriously.

            • dragontamer an hour ago

              Nor I you.

              But started this by pointing out Elon Musks weakness in the field of AI, and the best anyone seems to have come up so far is that Elon Musk has more money so it doesn't matter. It's not quite the flex that the Musk fanboys think it is.

              The simplest solution would have been to ya know, point at an Elon Musk AI win. And Dojo, xAI, Grok are all relative failures in these respects.

      • saulapremium 2 hours ago

        I absolute abhor the man but I think this is silly. No doubt that he has had luck and help, but he is still a good businessman. He's certainly an asshole (almost certainly dark triad territory), but I think that can be a benefit when creating a business.

        • dragontamer 2 hours ago

          It isn't helping him in this fight vs Sam Altman, AI investments or the like.

    • paulpauper 3 hours ago

      This is what he Grok hopes to become, but probably too late

      • DANmode an hour ago

        Fifth place is fine, when the numbers and power in question are that large.

    • HardwareLust 3 hours ago

      And how much worse things would be if that had come to pass?

    • geek_at 3 hours ago

      why would he run Anthropic?

      • tptacek 3 hours ago

        As I understand it, Anthropic exists in part as a quirk of how Dario Amodei's experience at OpenAI went. In the world where Musk controls OpenAI, I don't think you can assume Anthropic splinters off the same way (for overdetermined reasons! I'm not saying Musk is a better manager.)

        • keeda 2 hours ago

          Hmm, my understanding is that Dario split over insufficient focus on safety at OpenAI (which, admittedly, could just be the PR-friendly reason) -- something that Elon is also clearly not big on.

          Safety not only seems to be an anti-priority at xAI given what we've seen come out of it, even at OpenAI Elon seemed not that concerned with safety, leading to that entertaining incident with a "golden jackass" trophy: https://xcancel.com/abc7newsbayarea/status/20546984193823543...

          Almost certainly Dario would still have split from under Elon too, but also very likely that Elon would have immediately thrown a barrage of IP / NDA / trade secret / non-compete violation lawsuits to cripple Anthropic and keep it from reaching the frontier.

          • tptacek 2 hours ago

            It's not my argument here that Musk is necessarily more aligned with Amodei.

  • moralestapia 2 hours ago

    You can hate Musk all you want but between him and Scam I'd pick Musk any day.

    What they did to him was unfair, he put in all the money, office and initial push, he deserves a piece of the pie he created. This is quite unfair towards him.

    • eukara 19 minutes ago

      Should have done it sooner. He took his time. He should know timing is important: That's why he frequently skips getting approval for his construction work, dumps drilling fluids (while feigning compliance!)... or builds an illegal power plant. He usually seems to have little patience.

      We're all supposed to play by the same rules.

  • cubefox 3 hours ago

    So you are allowed to violate the law if you aren't sued quickly enough.

    • pocksuppet 3 hours ago

      Yes. This has always been, and will always be, the case. It's the same in things like copyright law - you can violate any software license if the copyright holder doesn't know you're doing it, or doesn't want to sue you, or doesn't sue you in time. It's the same with taxi medallions or hotel regulations if you're trying to start Uber or AirBNB.

      • cubefox 3 hours ago

        What Altman and Brockman did still seems highly unethical.

        • mrhottakes 2 hours ago

          The tech industry largely does not care about ethics.

          • DANmode an hour ago

            You misspelled “finance”.

        • johnbellone 3 hours ago

          That shouldn’t surprise anyone.

    • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago

      Well, you're allowed to violate the contract if you aren't sued quickly enough. You're allowed to violate the law if you aren't prosecuted quickly enough (for some crimes).

  • DivingForGold 2 hours ago

    Musk may have lost round 1, but Musk has a HUGE pile of cash, and Open AI is a borrower from everybody and their brothers. Almost all the principle people left Open AI already.

    • henry2023 2 minutes ago

      Musk doesn’t seem particularly good at lawsuits. Remember when he was suing Twitter to get out of having to buy them?

      Perhaps he lacks good lawyers, perhaps he just can’t find substance and he’s filling out of spite.

    • ajross 2 hours ago

      That's misunderstanding the finances involved here. OpenAI is a privately held company; sure, that means they're "borrowing" from their investors technically. But that's in exactly the same sense that a public company is actually "owned" by its shareholders. The behavioral relationship goes the other way: people own bits of the company because they want it to do well and their share to grow in size, not because they expect the debt/dividend to be repaid per se.

      In point of fact most valuations place OpenAI in the hundreds of billions of dollars already and growing rapidly.

      Basically, no: OpenAI's pockets are deeper than Musks's personal wealth. Especially so considering that this suit is existentially important to them where Musk needs to maintain leverage for other efforts.

      There won't be a round 2. It's over.

  • mrcwinn 4 hours ago

    Advice for Elon: you can actually use ChatGPT on the web or the desktop app to schedule reminders for you, like "file lawsuit against OpenAI."

    • jordanb 4 hours ago

      The consequences of relying on grok..

    • LarsDu88 3 hours ago

      Did you not read the article at all? He had to do this in 2021, well before such GPT apps existed.

      • freejazz 3 hours ago

        That's not what the article stated. The jury had to find that the harms occurred prior to certain dates in 2021, not that Musk had to file before then.

  • shevy-java 2 hours ago

    Both should be fined for wasting our time with fake-troll court cases.

    Basically the title of the court case was: "Is Skynet slop going to be helpful to mankind".

    We all know how that story ends. Thus, fining both is warranted. When the superrich go to court, they should pay an extra fee. Like a billion per court case or so.

  • rvz 4 hours ago

    Sam is just too good at this game and as I said before [0] is far worse than Elon and also outsmarted him.

    Of course this will be appealed but, as you see the claims just don't stick.

    [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41651664

    • armchairhacker 3 hours ago

      Why do you think Sam is worse than Elon?

      • cozzyd 3 hours ago

        Presumably better at being devious. Elon is sloppy...

        • ryandvm 3 hours ago

          There's something to be said for the fact that the current crop of plutocrats just show their whole asses.

    • an0malous 3 hours ago

      I’m not a Sam Altman fan, but I think it’s debatable if he’s worse than the guy who did a sieg heil at a political rally

      • whaleofatw2022 2 hours ago

        Be more afraid of the technocrat who doesn't even have a tell. It means they are better at manipulation.

        • armchairhacker 36 minutes ago

          Does this also mean we should be more afraid of (leadership) Democrats than Republicans?

  • jsLavaGoat 2 hours ago

    He lost his trial. That is just the first phase of a lawsuit.

  • ViAchKoN 2 hours ago

    Interesting how it played out. Curious will it somehow affect OpenAI business or XAi.

  • loxodrome 3 hours ago

    Ending a trial over a bureaucratic technicality is not good justice.

    • paxys 3 hours ago

      Statute of limitations is not a "bureaucratic technicality", it is the law.

      • loxodrome an hour ago

        I recognize the value of the statute of limitations, but it is a technicality, and unfortunately, the central legal questions of this case were not addressed.

      • wagwang 3 hours ago

        Can some lawyer explain the rationale of statute of limitations? Like why does a robber get to get away with the crime if they are able to evade the police for x number of years. Is it just because the trials suck after a while cuz no one remembers anything?

        • throwway120385 3 hours ago

          The easier scenario to think about where statutes of limitation really make sense is in collection of payment through the court system. Suppose you buy something on post-payment terms and then the supplier bumbles around forgetting to bill you for it. At what point should you reasonably be expected to pay the bill? In my state you get 7 years, and I think that's probably pretty generous because it covers the entire tab from when you get the thing to when you start a proceeding in court.

          For a robbery that doesn't involve a weapon I think we should generally forgive and forget if it's been long enough. Nobody cared enough to bring action in court for whatever reason, and it would be awful for someone in their 40's to be jailed and brought into court for something that happened in their 20's. At that point if the government fails to prosecute that's on them, and on us for failing to hold them accountable. But 20 years is a long time and people can change over that timespan, so it probably doesn't make sense to hold a grudge for that long.

          There are especially egregious crimes that have no statute of limitations like murder and sexual assault, but we might find our society better off for keeping the statute of limitations for injuries that we can recover from.

        • badlibrarian 3 hours ago

          Evidence degrades, memories fade, witnesses die. Generally the worse the crime, the longer the statute of limitations. Murder in most places has no limit.

          Also, if someone hasn't committed a crime in, say, 20 years, there's questionable need to lock them up for three years to deter the behavior. Goal is to optimize the overall system even if some people slip through the cracks.

          • charcircuit an hour ago

            >Evidence degrades

            Maybe in the past, but with modern technology that isn't always true. Statue of limitations comes from a time before even cameras existed.

        • qyph 3 hours ago

          Not a lawyer but generally it is as you say: "because the trials suck after a while cuz no one remembers anything". It's not fair to have a trial when the evidence is unreliable because of the flow of time.

          Encouraging timely action is another factor. Generally people with real harms will file sooner than later, otherwise why wait?

          It's also to grant peace of mind -- so people can stop worrying about potential litigation after some amount of time.

        • nradov 3 hours ago

          Are you asking about criminal or civil law? This was a civil case. The general reason for imposing filing time limits is that it's better for businesses and society in general to have certainty about outcomes rather than perfect justice. If a plaintiff tries to dredge up old issues from many years ago it just wastes everyone's time and clogs up the court system.

          • repelsteeltje 3 hours ago

            +1

            Wasting everyone's time and clogging up the court system perfectly describes the heart of this matter. Plain bullying and hype.

        • wvenable 3 hours ago

          That's definitely one of the reasons; evidence gets worse over time. Memories fade, witnesses die or become unavailable, documents get lost or destroyed, and physical evidence degrades. In this case specifically which is centred around a lot of discovery of emails and text chats, you can imagine that in other 5-10 years a lot of that discovery might become impossible to get and could drastically alter the outcome of the case.

          It's also generally considered unfair for someone to have an indefinite threat of being sued or prosecuted hanging over them when their ability to defend themselves gets weaker over time. Limitations discourage strategic delays or using old claims as leverage far into the future. Without limitation periods, old business transactions could be reopened forever, estates could never fully settle, people and businesses would face constant uncertainty.

          Ultimately, the courts are just better at resolving current disputes than reconstructing old ones.

        • paxys 3 hours ago

          If they were evading the police then the statute of limitations would not apply, because the case would stay active the entire time.

          It is instead relevant if the state decides not to charge you for a crime but comes back to you decades later and goes "we changed our mind, now you have a week to come up with a defense".

        • 48terry 2 hours ago

          You, hypothetically, are a bit of a rough person in your early 20s. You do some Crimes, one of which was against me. We'll say it was enough to give you a hefty fine and a year or less of jail time.

          I don't press charges.

          20 years pass. You grow up. You've changed your ways. You've become a squeaky-clean individual. You've put all that behind you. You become a healthy member of society. Your career's underway, you live in your own place, you may or may not have started a family.

          Hey, remember that Crime I didn't press charges about at the time? Well, surprise, motherfucka. I've been waiting for this moment to do so. To the courts you go, get your ass fined, thrown in jail, and give you a criminal record, all so it'd hurt you that much worse now that you have your roots planted in your life.

          Actually, you did Crimes to several people, right? Let's get them all in on this action! We'll just kind of trickle the suits in, one-by-one. Let one resolve, give it a few months, the next guy presses charges about his. Just kind of a steady flow of skeletons in the closet that you have to either defend against (and how are you gonna do that? It's 20 years old, hope you have evidence for your side somewhere in the attic) or take the sentencing of (which will do wonders for that career of yours), just to make your life hell.

        • sobellian 3 hours ago

          Not a lawyer, but - fugitives don't get to run the clock on statute of limitations.

        • tim333 3 hours ago

          To a large extent.

      • Arodex 3 hours ago

        Then why did the American justice system needed nine jurors when a clerk could have sufficed?

        The American judicial system is completely Byzantine and rotten, from top to bottom. Worse than many third world countries.

        • jonlucc 3 hours ago

          There are questions of fact involved, and the judge empaneled the jury to resolve the factual dispute. In this case, when did the clock on SoL start ticking? Was it tolled for any amount of time to extend the date? Those are more than just counting 3 years on a calendar.

      • jacobp100 3 hours ago

        It can be both

      • dcow 3 hours ago

        I am absolutely certain that if Sam was suing xAI and the case got dismissed on a technicality people would be lined up with screeds about the injustice of the situation.

        • tim333 3 hours ago

          I think it would depend on the facts of the case. This one seemed a bit of a non case. Quote from a law expert in the FT which I thought good:

          >the spectacle of these two multibillionaires fighting about power and money has distorted and obscured what the law is meant to care about here, which is the public interest

          (https://www.ft.com/content/846479c8-4ab0-4812-a1d5-08abdd8b9...)

        • freejazz 3 hours ago

          That's just a point about how (annoying) Sam-boosters are.

    • newaccountman2 3 hours ago

      If you consider a statute of limitations to be a mere bureaucratic technicality, then you might as well say we shouldn't have the entire Anglo-American legal system.

      Moreover, there is no "justice" here either way--it's just rich people suing each other.

    • freejazz 3 hours ago

      The jury found against Musk - what exactly are you talking about?

      • pixl97 3 hours ago

        Like any case involving legal matters, they are talking about things they deeply do not understand.

        • freejazz 3 hours ago

          More shocking than the sheer incorrectness of the legal analysis I see here often is the confidence with which it is offered.

  • jdw64 3 hours ago

    It turns out 'stealing a charity' is strictly defined in California law as 'commercializing it with Microsoft instead of my car company.' Glad we finally got that clarified