Saturday, November 23rd

    A Closer Look at Elon Musk's Lawsuit After OpenAI Published by His Emails

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    Elon Musk's lawyer has filed a lawsuit against Open and CEO Sam Altman, seeking to repay Altman and co-founder Greg Brockman for profits from OpenAI.

    Elon Musk's lawyer on Tuesday brought a lawsuit against billionaires against the Open and CEO Sam Altman, ending the legitimate struggle for the newly created companies.

    In 2015, Musk founded the Open with others and sued the company in February and accused ChatGPT Maker with the most advanced AI technology so that private customers can opt out of the original non -profit tasks. The lawsuit asked the jury and the company to repay Altman and co-founder and president Greg Brockman all profits they made from the company.

    The activities that give up the trial also took place in Musk's opening of several positions on his social media platform X. One day after the Open and his treatment users' data criticized, the Apple Partnership announced.

    “If Apple integrates the Open at the US (operating system) level, my company will forbid the Apple device. This is an unacceptable breach of security," Musk said. (Apple said in its statement that user queries sent to ChatGPT will not be stored in OpenAI.)

    The Musk-OpenAI legal battle reflected differing visions of how the creator of ChatGPT, which has skyrocketed in value and become a leader in the burgeoning AI space that many see as the future of technology, should be run.

    Musk accused OpenAI of racing to develop powerful "general artificial intelligence" technology to "maximize profits." Meanwhile, OpenAI accuses Musk of being jealous that he is no longer involved with the startup, as he left OpenAI in 2018 after unsuccessfully trying to convince his co-founders to let Tesla buy OpenAI.

    While OpenAI called Musk's claims "pure fiction," the billionaire isn't alone in questioning OpenAI's leadership and direction. Last year, the company faced a high -level management crisis that results in Altman's temporary exhausts, apparently the concerns of several board members about the risk of artificial intelligence. After days of uncertainty and intervention from Microsoft, the main investor of the Open, Altman was restored in his position in what industrial analysts said it was a victory for those who want to commercialize AI technology. Recently, several high-profile OpenAI security executives left the company, and several publicly claimed that the company had prioritized the rapid rollout of new products over security. Weeks later, the company said it had established a new committee that would make recommendations to the company's board about safety and security.

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