By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The Tech DiffThe Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Reading: “Elon Musk’s OpenAI Lawsuit: 5 Shocking Revelations Uncovered”
Share
Font ResizerAa
The Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
Font ResizerAa
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Search
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Follow US
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
© Copyright 2022. All Rights Reserved By The Tech Diff.
The Tech Diff > Blog > Technology > “Elon Musk’s OpenAI Lawsuit: 5 Shocking Revelations Uncovered”
Technology

“Elon Musk’s OpenAI Lawsuit: 5 Shocking Revelations Uncovered”

Admin
Last updated: May 19, 2026 7:08 am
Admin
Share
“Elon Musk’s OpenAI Lawsuit: 5 Shocking Revelations Uncovered”
SHARE

Friendship breakups are never easy, but few are as messy and expensive as the collapse of Elon Musk and Sam Altman’s once thriving tech bromance, which has — for now — reached a legal end.

Contents
OpenAI’s board members questioned Sam Altman’s honestyGreg Brockman kept a diary — and he probably wishes he hadn’tSurprise, surprise: Elon Musk is difficult to collaborate withMicrosoft cozied up to OpenAI to avoid being left behind in the AI raceEverybody wants to rule the world (of artificial general intelligence)

On Monday, a jury ruled against Musk in his lawsuit against OpenAI, which contended that Altman and other executives “stole a charity” (as one of Musk’s lawyers put it) by turning much of what was once a nonprofit research lab into a corporate behemoth. (Disclosure: Vox Media is one of several publishers that have signed partnership agreements with OpenAI. Our reporting remains editorially independent.) For three weeks, lawyers on both sides deployed an increasingly unhinged body of evidence in an attempt to discredit both men and prove they’re untrustworthy and power-hungry.

-24% Safe & Fun Kids Headphones with Microphone – Perfect for Travel!
Headphones

Safe & Fun Kids Headphones with Microphone – Perfect for Travel!

$16.99 Original price was: $16.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
Buy Now
-34% Elevate Your Workspace: 2-Tier Wood Desk Organizer & Stand
Computer & Accessories

Elevate Your Workspace: 2-Tier Wood Desk Organizer & Stand

$32.99 Original price was: $32.99.$21.65Current price is: $21.65.
Buy Now
-30% Avantree HT41899: Dual Bluetooth Headphones for TV Bliss!
Headphones

Avantree HT41899: Dual Bluetooth Headphones for TV Bliss!

$171.99 Original price was: $171.99.$119.99Current price is: $119.99.
Buy Now
-9% Chic Pink Gold Keyboard Mouse Pad Set: Ergonomic Support!
Computer & Accessories

Chic Pink Gold Keyboard Mouse Pad Set: Ergonomic Support!

$21.99 Original price was: $21.99.$19.99Current price is: $19.99.
Buy Now

Musk claimed he was duped into donating roughly $38 million to OpenAI under false pretenses and was suing for $150 billion in financial restitution alongside major changes to OpenAI’s leadership and governance structure. Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers accepted the jury’s decision that Musk failed to bring his lawsuit within the three-year statute of limitations, given that OpenAI first added its for-profit arm in 2018. However, it’s possible that the evidence put forth at trial will still be enough to convince state regulators to revisit the agreements that allowed OpenAI to restructure into a for-profit enterprise to begin with.

Lawyers tell me that Musk will likely choose to appeal the ruling, meaning the catfight might not be over yet. But even beyond the outcome, the trial shone an often uncomfortable spotlight on the inner workings of Silicon Valley and the AI industry. Here are five major revelations from the trial.

OpenAI’s board members questioned Sam Altman’s honesty

Musk’s legal team sought to paint Altman as a deeply untrustworthy person, prone to lying to his co-founders, employees, and board members if it meant advancing his interests.

Multiple former OpenAI employees and board members testified as much in the courtroom. Altman’s “pattern of behavior related to his honesty and candor” led directly to his temporary ouster as CEO in 2023, said Helen Toner, a former board member, in a video deposition. He had a tendency of “saying one thing to one person and completely the opposite to another person,” Mira Murati, OpenAI’s former chief technology officer, testified. In one instance, she said, Altman explicitly lied to her about the safety review required to vet a new AI model.

Greg Brockman kept a diary — and he probably wishes he hadn’t

Some of the more salacious evidence entered into trial came from a personal diary kept by OpenAI president Greg Brockman, who chronicled his “stream of consciousness” as he weighed whether it would be “morally bankrupt” to pivot OpenAI into a for-profit enterprise.

“Can’t see us turning this into a for-profit without a very nasty fight,” he wrote in one 2017 entry. “It’d be wrong to steal the nonprofit from him,” meaning Musk, who co-founded OpenAI and provided most of its start-up funding. “He’s really not an idiot,” Brockman later wrote. “His story will correctly be that we weren’t honest with him in the end.”

Brockman was also candid about his personal ambitions; “It would be nice to be making the billions,” he wrote. He later received a stake in OpenAI now estimated to be worth about $30 billion.

Surprise, surprise: Elon Musk is difficult to collaborate with

OpenAI built a bot in 2017 that was so advanced, it could beat top professional players at strategic multiplayer battle game Dota 2, a major milestone for the budding lab. “Time to make the next step for OpenAI. This is the triggering event,” Musk emailed Brockman.

Musk gave Brockman and cofounder Ilya Sutskever new Tesla Model 3 cars, presumably to “butter us up,” Brockman testified. The Tesla CEO then summoned them to his self-described “haunted mansion” for discussions of a possible OpenAI for-profit arm, where whiskey was served by Musk’s then-girlfriend Amber Heard.

At one point, Musk became so irate at his guests’ insistence that they share control of OpenAI — rather than cede absolute control to Musk — that “I actually thought he was going to hit me, physically attack me,” Brockman testified. In the following months, Musk repeatedly pitched having Tesla absorb OpenAI, Altman testified. And, in one “particularly hair-raising moment,” he mused that OpenAI should pass on to his children.

Musk ultimately left OpenAI in 2018 to begin building his own competitor. During an all-hands meeting, Musk got into another tense verbal tussle with Josh Achiam, now OpenAI’s chief futurist, over the race to develop artificial general intelligence. “He snapped and called me a jackass,” Achiam testified. For Achiam’s valor, two OpenAI employees — including Dario Amodei, who later departed to form Anthropic — awarded him a small golden statue of a donkey’s rear end, inscribed with the message, “Never stop being a jackass for safety.”

Microsoft cozied up to OpenAI to avoid being left behind in the AI race

Musk first funded OpenAI because of another friendship breakup, this one with Google cofounder Larry Page, who Musk says mocked him at his own birthday party for preferring humans over computers. Microsoft — which is named in Musk’s lawsuit for aiding and abetting OpenAI’s abandonment of its nonprofit mission — later became OpenAI’s first major corporate investor in 2019, because it, too, wanted to compete with Google as the AI race heated up.

“I don’t want to be IBM,” Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella wrote to executives, referring to that company’s decline in the personal computing race, according to emails revealed at trial. “It was becoming even more core and important that we had real agency at every layer of the stack,” Nadella testified.

That meant ingratiating itself in every corner of OpenAI’s world. Microsoft played a crucial role in bringing Altman back to power after the failed board coup in 2023, which Nadella referred to as “amateur city, as far as I was concerned.” In a text thread revealed at trial, Altman asked Microsoft executives to vet various members of OpenAI’s reconstituted board of directors, who now control both the for-profit company and the original nonprofit.

By this summer, Microsoft will have invested over $100 billion in OpenAI, one of the company’s executives testified. The company was awarded a 27 percent stake in OpenAI last fall.

Everybody wants to rule the world (of artificial general intelligence)

Microsoft. Musk. Altman. Brockman. Almost everyone who testified at trial pointed fingers at a different boogeyman whose motives were too impure and whose character was too corruptible, to be trusted with control of what all agreed would be an extremely consequential technology. By contrast, their own introspection mostly took a back seat to ambition.

“We don’t want to have a Terminator outcome,” Musk testified, to apparent eyerolls from Judge Gonzalez Rogers, who tried and sometimes failed to steer the trial away from discussions of AI’s existential risks. “If you have someone who is not trustworthy in charge of AI,” Musk said, “I think that’s a very big danger for the whole world.”

Over a decade ago, Musk came together with OpenAI’s cofounders to build a charity equipped to take on a different threat then poised to lead the AI race: Google, which had recently acquired Demis Hassabis’ DeepMind. Now, like Altman and Brockman, who testified that they resisted Musk’s dictatorial attempts to secure absolute control of artificial general intelligence, Musk portrayed himself as someone selfless and transparent enough to be put in charge.

“It is ironic that your client, despite these risks, is creating a company that is in the exact space,” Gonzalez Rogers at one point told Musk’s lawyer, in reference to xAI, which has come under fire this year for facilitating the mass creation of nonconsensual deepfakes. “I suspect there are plenty of people who wouldn’t like to put the future of humanity in Mr. Musk’s hands.”

Update, May 18, 2026, 2 pm ET: This story has been updated to reflect the conclusion of the trial.

You’ve read 1 article in the last month

Here at Vox, we’re unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you — threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.

Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.

We rely on readers like you — join us.

Swati Sharma

Vox Editor-in-Chief

Here

Image Credit: www.vox.com

You Might Also Like

“CISA Credentials Exposed in Public GitHub Repository”

“Google I/O 2026 Keynote: Live Updates from the Ground”

“SandboxAQ Launches Drug Discovery Models on Claude—No PhD Needed”

“Sony’s 10th Anniversary ‘ColleXion’ Headphones Unveiled in Leaked Images”

Falling in Love with Humanity Amidst the Rise of AI

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article “Meta’s Summer Sale Slashes Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to Historic Low” “Meta’s Summer Sale Slashes Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to Historic Low”
Next Article iOS 27 Unveils Standalone Siri, Enhanced AI Tools, and Shortcuts iOS 27 Unveils Standalone Siri, Enhanced AI Tools, and Shortcuts
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Product categories

  • Computer & Accessories
  • Headphones
  • Laptops
  • Phones
  • Wearables

Trending Products

  • Safe & Fun Kids Headphones with Microphone – Perfect for Travel! Safe & Fun Kids Headphones with Microphone – Perfect for Travel! $16.99 Original price was: $16.99.$12.99Current price is: $12.99.
  • Capture Life: 1080P Button Camera for Android On-the-Go! Capture Life: 1080P Button Camera for Android On-the-Go! $35.99
  • Revolutionize Your Work: Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5-2025 Unveiled! Revolutionize Your Work: Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5-2025 Unveiled! $1,447.34 Original price was: $1,447.34.$999.99Current price is: $999.99.
  • Kids Headphones: Safe, Stylish & Foldable with Mic! Kids Headphones: Safe, Stylish & Foldable with Mic! $18.99 Original price was: $18.99.$16.99Current price is: $16.99.
  • Boost Your Productivity: Dell Inspiron 15 3535 Laptop Deal! Boost Your Productivity: Dell Inspiron 15 3535 Laptop Deal! $409.97

You Might also Like

“Commencement Speakers in 2026 Should Avoid Mentioning AI”
Technology

“Commencement Speakers in 2026 Should Avoid Mentioning AI”

Admin Admin 4 Min Read
Cisco Hits Record Revenue Amid 4,000 Job Cuts
Technology

Cisco Hits Record Revenue Amid 4,000 Job Cuts

Admin Admin 3 Min Read
“Social Media Giants Settle Suit Over Student Harm Risks”
Technology

“Social Media Giants Settle Suit Over Student Harm Risks”

Admin Admin 3 Min Read

About Us

At The Tech Diff, we believe technology is more than just innovation—it’s a lifestyle that shapes the way we work, connect, and explore the world. Our mission is to keep readers informed, inspired, and ahead of the curve with fresh updates, expert insights, and meaningful stories from across the digital landscape.

Useful Link

  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Categories

  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

The Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
Follow US
© Copyright 2022. All Rights Reserved By The Tech Diff.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?