Mr. Musk claims OpenAI has shifted its approach to being profit-focused after aligning itself with Microsoft.
Elon Musk has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI and its co-founders, alleging that they violated the companyโs founding agreement by developing artificial intelligence (AI) for profit rather than advancing it for the good of humanity.
Mr. Musk, who was an original board member of OpenAI but left in 2018, said in his complaint that the defendantsโOpenAI CEO Sam Altman and president Gregory Brockmanโbroke their pledge to develop AI โfor the benefit of humanityโ and are instead pursuing profit and power.
The lawsuit, filed late on Feb. 29 in San Francisco, alleged a breach of contract, arguing that Mr. Altman and Mr. Brockman initially joined forces with Mr. Musk to launch OpenAI as an open-source, non-profit company.
Mr. Musk said the founding agreement required that OpenAI make its technology, such as the AI chatbot GPT-4 that the company developed, โfreely availableโ to the public. However, Mr. Musk says that OpenAI has shifted its approach to being profit-focused after aligning itself with Microsoft, which has invested around $13 billion in the startup.
โContrary to the Founding Agreement, Defendants have chosen to use GPT-4 not for the benefit of humanity, but as proprietary technology to maximize profits for literally the largest company in the world,โ Mr. Musk wrote in the complaint, referring to Microsoft.
Vast Power โUnduly Concentratedโ
In the lawsuit, Mr. Musk argues that OpenAIโs GPT-4 constitutes artificial general intelligence (AGI), which is an AI whose intelligence is so advanced that it is on par with, or surpasses, that of humans.
โOpenAI, Inc. has been transformed into a closed-source de facto subsidiary of the largest technology company in the world: Microsoft,โ Mr. Musk continued. โUnder its new board, it is not just developing but is actually refining an AGI [artificial general intelligence] to maximize profits for Microsoft, rather than for the benefit of humanity.โ
Mr. Muskโs lawsuit also hones in on the 2023 firing and subsequent reinstatement of Mr. Altman as the chief executive. He argues that Mr. Altmanโs temporary departure prompted Microsoft to step in and push for the resignation of board members who tried to oust him, leading to a restructuring that changed the face of the company.
Byย Tom Ozimek