Elon Musk and OpenAI Lawsuit: Allegations and Unexpected Facts

The jury's dismissal of the lawsuit filed by Elon Musk against OpenAI founders and Microsoft confirmed the observations during the trial: Musk's claim lacked sufficient grounds. During the proceedings, OpenAI lawyers proved point-by-point that the law was on their side, while Musk, dissatisfied with the court's decision, harshly criticized the judge and announced an appeal. This is reported by Techcrunch.com reports .
During the trial, unexpected information was revealed not only about Sam Altman but also about Elon Musk himself. Greg Brockman stated that in 2017, Musk recruited OpenAI researchers to the Tesla headquarters to improve the autopilot system. In this process, leading scientists such as Andrej Karpathy, Ilya Sutskever, and Scott Grey provided free assistance to Tesla employees.
It turns out that Tesla did not make any payments to OpenAI for these services. Musk's lawsuit was primarily aimed at accusing Altman and Brockman of using charitable funds for their own benefit. However, experts believe that Musk's own diversion of charitable organization resources for his commercial project, Tesla, makes these accusations questionable.
Columbia Law School professor Dorothy Lund noted that Musk's diversion of charitable funds for his company's interests is not legal. This situation made Musk appear guilty in the very case he accused others of, weakening his claim morally.













