• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Tech News, Magazine & Review WordPress Theme 2017
  • Home
  • Review
    TMD’s keyless bike lock is a $280 solution to a $60 problem

    TMDs keyless bike lock is a $280 solution to a $60 problem

    Oppo’s Bubble selfie screen is crying out for Qi2

    Oppos Bubble selfie screen is crying out for Qi2

    BYOK is my new go-to distraction-free writing tool

    BYOK is my new go-to distraction-free writing tool

    I drove the Slate Truck — there’s more to it than EV minimalism

    I drove the Slate Truck — there’s more to it than EV minimalism

    The Fitbit Air takes a smarter approach to the AI health dumpster fire

    The Fitbit Air takes a smarter approach to the AI health dumpster fire

    Meta launches cheaper smart glasses without Ray-Ban

    Meta launches cheaper smart glasses without Ray-Ban

  • Gaming
    Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so they’re making their own

    Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so theyre making their own

    This puzzle game’s simple premise hides surprising depth

    This puzzle game’s simple premise hides surprising depth

    With GTA looming, consoles are getting expensive at the worst possible time

    With GTA looming, consoles are getting expensive at the worst possible time

    Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

    Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

    It’s a bad time to want a new computer

    It’s a bad time to want a new computer

    Xbox prices spike another $100 or more

    Xbox prices spike another $100 or more

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Framework has good news and bad news

    Framework has good news and bad news

    Here’s a bunch of Prime Day deals on keyboards, mice, and other peripherals we like

    Heres a bunch of Prime Day deals on keyboards, mice, and other peripherals we like

    Get MacBooks at a Prime Day discount before Apple’s new price hikes kick in

    Get MacBooks at a Prime Day discount before Apple’s new price hikes kick in

    Leica’s $6,690 SL3-P pairs 44-megapixel stills with 8K video

    Leicas $6,690 SL3-P pairs 44-megapixel stills with 8K video

    Laptop prices suck these days, so here are some Prime Day deals that help a little

    Laptop prices suck these days, so here are some Prime Day deals that help a little

    Sony’s AI Camera Assistant is exactly as bad as it looks

    Sonys AI Camera Assistant is exactly as bad as it looks

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier

    Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier

    Why is Apple asking me to pay more for Big Tech’s AI obsession?

    Why is Apple asking me to pay more for Big Techs AI obsession?

    Of course Meta thinks gambling is the future

    Of course Meta thinks gambling is the future

    Apple’s AirPods Max 2 headphones are still $150 off — for now

    Apple’s AirPods Max 2 headphones are still $150 off — for now

    Apple’s most powerful Macs might be waiting until 2027 for big processor upgrades

    Apples most powerful Macs might be waiting until 2027 for big processor upgrades

    It’s the last day of Prime Day — here are over 130 great deals to choose from

    Its the last day of Prime Day — here are over 130 great deals to choose from

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
    TMD’s keyless bike lock is a $280 solution to a $60 problem

    TMDs keyless bike lock is a $280 solution to a $60 problem

    Oppo’s Bubble selfie screen is crying out for Qi2

    Oppos Bubble selfie screen is crying out for Qi2

    BYOK is my new go-to distraction-free writing tool

    BYOK is my new go-to distraction-free writing tool

    I drove the Slate Truck — there’s more to it than EV minimalism

    I drove the Slate Truck — there’s more to it than EV minimalism

    The Fitbit Air takes a smarter approach to the AI health dumpster fire

    The Fitbit Air takes a smarter approach to the AI health dumpster fire

    Meta launches cheaper smart glasses without Ray-Ban

    Meta launches cheaper smart glasses without Ray-Ban

  • Gaming
    Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so they’re making their own

    Indie developers got tired of waiting for a new Star Fox, so theyre making their own

    This puzzle game’s simple premise hides surprising depth

    This puzzle game’s simple premise hides surprising depth

    With GTA looming, consoles are getting expensive at the worst possible time

    With GTA looming, consoles are getting expensive at the worst possible time

    Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

    Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

    It’s a bad time to want a new computer

    It’s a bad time to want a new computer

    Xbox prices spike another $100 or more

    Xbox prices spike another $100 or more

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Framework has good news and bad news

    Framework has good news and bad news

    Here’s a bunch of Prime Day deals on keyboards, mice, and other peripherals we like

    Heres a bunch of Prime Day deals on keyboards, mice, and other peripherals we like

    Get MacBooks at a Prime Day discount before Apple’s new price hikes kick in

    Get MacBooks at a Prime Day discount before Apple’s new price hikes kick in

    Leica’s $6,690 SL3-P pairs 44-megapixel stills with 8K video

    Leicas $6,690 SL3-P pairs 44-megapixel stills with 8K video

    Laptop prices suck these days, so here are some Prime Day deals that help a little

    Laptop prices suck these days, so here are some Prime Day deals that help a little

    Sony’s AI Camera Assistant is exactly as bad as it looks

    Sonys AI Camera Assistant is exactly as bad as it looks

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier

    Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier

    Why is Apple asking me to pay more for Big Tech’s AI obsession?

    Why is Apple asking me to pay more for Big Techs AI obsession?

    Of course Meta thinks gambling is the future

    Of course Meta thinks gambling is the future

    Apple’s AirPods Max 2 headphones are still $150 off — for now

    Apple’s AirPods Max 2 headphones are still $150 off — for now

    Apple’s most powerful Macs might be waiting until 2027 for big processor upgrades

    Apples most powerful Macs might be waiting until 2027 for big processor upgrades

    It’s the last day of Prime Day — here are over 130 great deals to choose from

    Its the last day of Prime Day — here are over 130 great deals to choose from

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
The Latest Tech News | Breaking Bews In Thchnology
No Result
View All Result
Home Microsoft

Musk v. Altman proved that AI is led by the wrong people

admin by admin
May 19, 2026
Musk v. Altman proved that AI is led by the wrong people
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The tech trial of the year, Musk v. Altman, was ultimately a fight for control. Elon Musk argued that Sam Altman, with whom he helped found the now-massive company OpenAI, shouldn’t direct the future of AI. Altman’s lawyers, in turn, poked at Musk’s own credibility. A jury came to a verdict on Monday after just two hours of deliberation, dismissing Musk’s claims due to the statute of limitations.

In a strictly legal sense, three weeks of testimony added up to nothing. But the trial offered a more damning broader takeaway: Almost nobody in this saga seems worth trusting. Some of the most powerful people in tech seem temperamentally incapable of dealing with each other honestly. And if that’s true, it raises a bigger question: Why are they in control of a trillion-dollar industry that’s set to upend people’s lives?

OpenAI was, in the testimony of both Musk and Altman, founded to stop powerful AI from being owned and advanced by the wrong people. Testimony and evidence showed its founding team fretting about who would control artificial general intelligence (AGI), a buzzword for AI that broadly equals or surpasses human knowledge and ability. They deeply feared Google DeepMind and its leader, Demis Hassabis. In 2015, Altman said he’d been mulling over whether anything could “stop humanity from developing AI” — and after concluding it was impossible, that he wanted “someone other than google to do it first.”

Fellow cofounders Greg Brockman and Ilya Sutskever so strongly opposed one-person control that they seemed willing to torpedo a lucrative deal that could — in their words — give Musk an “AI dictatorship.” In a part of the same email addressed to Altman, Brockman and Sutskever questioned his motivations, writing, “We haven’t been able to fully trust your judgements throughout this process … Is AGI truly your primary motivation? How does it connect to your political goals?”

These concerns would be quickly borne out. A central focus of Musk v. Altman was “the blip,” a five-day period in November 2023 when OpenAI’s board removed Altman as CEO. Sutskever had spent more than a year architecting his ouster, assembling a 52-page memo alleging “a consistent pattern of lying, undermining his execs, and pitting his execs against one another.” The implications were broader than executive infighting, potentially impacting the public rollout of AI systems. Then-CTO Mira Murati, for instance, testified in court that Altman told her OpenAI’s legal team had okayed skipping a safety review for one of its models — a statement, she said, that turned out to be false.

In closing arguments, Musk attorney Steven Molo hammered home the long list of people who had testified under oath that Altman was, in one way or another, a liar — all of whom Altman had worked with for years. “The defendants absolutely need you to believe Sam Altman,” Molo told the jury. “If you cannot trust him, if you don’t believe him, they cannot win. It’s that simple.”

But during court proceedings, Musk — who now leads competing lab xAI, under his space company SpaceX — didn’t come off any better. Joshua Achiam, now OpenAI’s chief futurist, testified that Musk’s race against Google led him to take an “obviously unsafe and reckless” approach to achieving AGI. When he and others raised concerns, he says, Musk argued that OpenAI’s for-profit makeover created incentives to disregard safety, but his own xAI is for-profit and has, at best, a haphazard approach to safety. And in the name of making sure OpenAI remained open, Musk was obsessive in his need for control over it. In closing arguments, Sarah Eddy, one of OpenAI’s attorneys, told the jury that Musk “wanted dominion over AGI.”

As one X user put it, “if untrustworthyness had mass, putting Musk and Altman too close to one another would collapse the courtroom and all of earth into a black hole.”

OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. On X, Musk posted a statement saying he’d be filing an appeal.

It’s not just Musk and Altman, either. Trial evidence suggested Murati helped get Altman removed, then switched sides to support his reinstatement while appearing “totally uninterested” in disclosing the role she’d played. Shivon Zilis, a close Musk associate who served on OpenAI’s board, asked Musk if he’d “prefer I stay close and friendly to OpenAI to keep info flowing” during his departure — avoiding revealing that she had two children with him at the time. Brockman’s diary entries played a key role in Musk’s case; at one point, he admitted Musk could “correctly” claim “we weren’t honest with him” if OpenAI made a for-profit shift without his involvement.

Musk v. Altman gave each man an opportunity to sling dirt at the other and, in theory, establish himself as the more scrupulous guardian of AI. But a more obvious takeaway is that several of the AI industry’s household names are at best naive — and, at worst, hypocrites with little regard for the consequences of their actions.

Public sentiment about AI is at an all-time low. In a Pew Research survey from last summer, half of US adults said the “increased use of AI in daily life makes them feel more concerned than excited” — and only 10 percent said they felt more excited than concerned. Many of these concerns are related to job loss, but protests are also surging against mass data center construction across the country. Some resistance has turned potentially violent, with individuals allegedly attempting to attack Altman’s home on two occasions. And many tech CEOs themselves maintain that they have bunkers or other doomsday-prepping plans for if things go horribly wrong.

These companies push public messaging that AI empowers its users. But a 2025 Pew Research study found that nearly 60 percent of US adults feel they have little to no control over how AI is used in their lives. In the US, the prospect of meaningful government regulation — which could at least offer some level of external oversight — remains shaky. And now, it’s clearer than ever how far the AI world’s biggest players will go to maintain control.

Amid the trial’s reams of evidence, one document offers a rare example of Altman and Musk offering to cede some power. In March 2015, Altman emailed Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella with a simple request: Sign a letter that he and Musk were drafting, asking the US government to establish “a new regulatory agency for AI safety” and address “the biggest risk to the continued existence of humanity that most people are ignoring.” Weeks later, Nadella responded to shut down the idea. The “issue of human safety and the control problem will become real issues,” he said. But executives, he insisted, should be calling for “federal funding and encouragement of research,” not oversight. Altman promptly agreed. The letter, he promised, would be changed — leaving the option of regulating the AI industry “if and when.”

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Hayden Field

    Hayden Field

    Hayden Field

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Hayden Field

  • AI

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All AI

  • Analysis

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Analysis

  • Elon Musk

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Elon Musk

  • Law

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Law

  • Microsoft

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Microsoft

  • OpenAI

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All OpenAI

  • Policy

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Policy

  • Report

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Report

  • Tech

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Tech

  • xAI

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All xAI

Tags: AI industry powerAI leadership ethics
admin

admin

Next Post
PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

Recommended.

Transfer Point is a modern adventure game made with 40-year-old software

Transfer Point is a modern adventure game made with 40-year-old software

April 2, 2026
Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

Android 17’s new foldable gaming mode could make flippy phones more fun

June 26, 2026

Trending.

Nintendo’s $500 Switch 2 bundle includes a game, and it’s available now

Nintendos $500 Switch 2 bundle includes a game, and it’s available now

May 20, 2026
Xbox fans want exclusives, more backward compatibility, and free online multiplayer

Xbox fans want exclusives, more backward compatibility, and free online multiplayer

May 19, 2026
GitHub faces a fight for its survival at Microsoft

GitHub faces a fight for its survival at Microsoft

May 22, 2026
Nintendo keeps finding new ways to reinvent platformers

Nintendo keeps finding new ways to reinvent platformers

May 19, 2026
PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

May 18, 2026
earmpro tech news

Stay ahead of the tech curve. Our website delivers clear, concise updates on the latest gadgets, AI breakthroughs, and software, empowering your digital future.

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
  • Apple
  • Applications
  • Computers
  • Gaming
  • Gear
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Smartphone
  • Microsoft
  • Photography
  • Security

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.