Billionaire Elon Musk sued OpenAI, the company that makes ChatGPT, and its CEO, Sam Altman, last week.
Musk, a founding team member of OpenAI, claims the company has deviated from its original non-profit goal of developing open-source artificial intelligence (AI) for the benefit of humanity and is instead focusing on “maximising profits” for Microsoft, a significant investor.
His attorneys claimed that since OpenAI had promised not to market any product that its board deemed to be artificial general intelligence (AGI), there had been a breach of contract.
In a blog post on Tuesday, OpenAI addressed the complaint, stating that Musk had approved the company’s choice to turn into a for-profit business and that he had emphasised that the company needed to raise “billions” of money in order to compete with Google.
“Sad that this is the situation.”
The post, which was co-authored by several of OpenAI’s cofounders, including Altman, Greg Brockman, and Ilya Sutskever, stated, “We’re sad that it’s come to this with someone whom we’ve deeply admired — someone who inspired us to aim higher, then told us we would fail, started a competitor, and then sued us when we started making meaningful progress towards OpenAI’s mission without him.”
A business that is profit-driven
According to OpenAI, Musk sent an email advising the startup to “attach to Tesla as its cash cow” and expressed a desire for the business to combine with the manufacturer of electric vehicles, Tesla.
According to OpenAI, the idea originated when Musk and the business determined that, in order to raise money for the development of artificial general intelligence (AGI), a for-profit organisation needed to be established in 2017.
The business stated that the wealthy entrepreneur then desired to be CEO of OpenAI, along with majority ownership and early board control.
However, OpenAI felt it went against its objective to allow any one person to have total control over the company, therefore Musk and the startup were unable to come to an agreement on a for-profit model.
Elon announced his departure from OpenAI, claiming he will create a viable rival to Google/DeepMind on his own. He promised to help us choose our own route, the post stated.
Elon wrote us an email in December 2018 stating that “even raising several hundred million won’t be enough.” It said, “This needs billions annually right now, otherwise forget it.
Emails from Musk
Emails that Musk had written to company employees were made public by OpenAI, proving that the billionaire supported the startup’s efforts to raise money. In one email, Musk stated, “This needs billions per year immediately or forget it,” according to OpenAI.
According to the blog post, OpenAI, a non-profit, has raised over $90 million from other donors and less than $45 million from Musk. Musk forced OpenAI to declare its first $1 billion fundraising commitment in 2015; at the time, co-founder Greg Brockman and CEO Sam Altman had only intended to raise $100 million.
Musk stated in an email that “we need to go with a much bigger number than $100M to avoid sounding hopeless relative to what Google or Facebook are spending.” “I believe we ought to declare that we have committed $1 billion in funding to begin with… Anything that someone else doesn’t supply, I’ll cover.
Regarding Open-Source AI
Additionally, OpenAI argues that it was right to refuse to make its work publicly available, stating that “Elon understood the mission did not imply open-sourcing AGI” (artificial general intelligence). In an email exchange that was made public by the firm in January 2016, Sutskever stated that “it’s totally OK to not share the science” and that “as we get closer to building AI, it will make sense to start being less open.” Musk answered, “Yeah.”