The Elon Musk vs. OpenAI trial (officially Musk v. Altman) is a high-profile federal civil case underway in Oakland, California, as of late April/early May 2026. It pits Musk against OpenAI, CEO Sam Altman, President Greg Brockman, and involves Microsoft as a major investor. Background
The trial remains ongoing with more testimony ahead—no verdict yet. It reflects deep tensions in the AI industry over profit vs. safety/openness.
- Founding (2015): Musk co-founded OpenAI with Altman, Brockman, and others as a nonprofit dedicated to developing artificial general intelligence (AGI) safely "for the benefit of humanity," not for profit. Musk provided significant early funding (around $38–50 million total, with personal involvement) and left the board in 2018.
- Pivot: OpenAI later shifted toward a for-profit model (capped-profit subsidiary under nonprofit control, with heavy Microsoft investment). It became one of the world's most valuable companies (valued at $700B–$850B+), with plans for an IPO. Musk founded rival xAI and has criticized OpenAI's direction.
- OpenAI "stole a charity."
- He was a "fool" for funding it under false pretenses.
- The shift enables "looting" of charities and betrays fiduciary duties.
- He seeks $134–150 billion in damages (to go to OpenAI's charitable arm), unwinding the for-profit structure, removal of Altman and Brockman, and reversion to pure nonprofit status.
- Jury trial before U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers.
- Jury selection and openings: Late April 2026.
- Musk testified for three days (Tue–Thu), often combatively during cross-examination. He sparred with OpenAI's lawyers, emphasized AI safety/"Terminator" risks, defended the original mission, and admitted details like xAI using OpenAI models.
- Other witnesses (e.g., Musk associate Jared Birchall) followed.
- Expected to last several weeks into May; Altman and others (possibly Microsoft’s Satya Nadella) are anticipated to testify.
The trial remains ongoing with more testimony ahead—no verdict yet. It reflects deep tensions in the AI industry over profit vs. safety/openness.
US law does not generally allow a straightforward "conversion" of a pure nonprofit (especially a 501(c)(3) public charity) into a for-profit entity while keeping the same assets and mission intact. Such transitions are heavily restricted by federal tax rules, state nonprofit corporation laws, and the charitable trust doctrine. They are possible only through indirect, carefully structured processes with significant oversight, approvals, and limitations. Key Legal Principles
In short: Pure conversion is difficult and rare because nonprofit assets aren't "owned" privately—they belong to the public charitable purpose. Hybrids or spin-offs are more common but must comply with strict rules to avoid legal challenges. Outcomes depend heavily on specific facts, governing documents, donor representations, and jurisdiction. This area often requires expert legal/tax advice and regulatory clearances.
- Charitable Trust Doctrine: Nonprofit assets (especially donations to a 501(c)(3)) are held in trust for specific charitable purposes. They cannot be diverted for private benefit or profit without violating fiduciary duties. This is central to Musk's claims against OpenAI.
- Federal Tax Rules (IRS):
- Assets of a dissolving or converting nonprofit must generally go to another tax-exempt organization, not private owners or a for-profit entity.
- Direct transfers to for-profits can trigger taxes, private inurement (benefits to insiders), excess benefit transactions, or loss of tax-exempt status.
- Prohibited transactions can lead to penalties, excise taxes, or revocation of exemption.
- State Laws: Rules vary significantly. Many states (including California, where OpenAI is based) do not permit direct statutory conversion of a nonprofit public benefit corporation to a for-profit one if it involves diverting charitable assets. Instead, organizations often:
- Form a new for-profit entity.
- Transfer activities/assets in a compliant way (e.g., fair market value sale or licensing with Attorney General oversight).
- Dissolve the original nonprofit, distributing remaining assets to other charities.
- Board Approval and Fiduciary Duties — Directors must act in the organization's best interest and consistent with its mission. Conflicts of interest (e.g., founders benefiting personally) are scrutinized.
- Attorney General Oversight — In many states (e.g., California), conversions or major asset transfers require notice to or approval from the state Attorney General, who protects charitable assets.
- Court/Regulatory Review — Large conversions may need judicial approval or face challenges for breach of trust.
- Donor/Founder Agreements — If specific promises were made to donors (written or implied via founding documents), deviation can lead to breach of contract or charitable trust claims.
In short: Pure conversion is difficult and rare because nonprofit assets aren't "owned" privately—they belong to the public charitable purpose. Hybrids or spin-offs are more common but must comply with strict rules to avoid legal challenges. Outcomes depend heavily on specific facts, governing documents, donor representations, and jurisdiction. This area often requires expert legal/tax advice and regulatory clearances.
OpenAI's and Sam Altman's defense in the Musk lawsuit centers on these core arguments:OpenAI's PositionOpenAI describes Musk's lawsuit as "baseless," motivated by jealousy, regret, and a desire to slow down a competitor while he builds his own AI company (xAI). Key points from their statements and court arguments:
The trial is ongoing, so more direct testimony from Altman is expected. OpenAI maintains confidence in its legal position.
- Musk knew about and supported a for-profit shift — In 2017, Musk himself pushed for (and even drafted documents for) a for-profit structure to raise the massive capital needed for AI development. He only opposed it later when he couldn't get majority control.
- Musk tried to gain control — He demanded majority equity, full control, or even a merger with Tesla. When rebuffed, he left the board in 2018, predicted OpenAI had "0% chance" of success without him, and later launched a rival.
- The hybrid structure serves the mission — OpenAI created for-profit arms (under nonprofit oversight) to attract investment (e.g., from Microsoft), hire top talent, and buy compute power—essential for advancing AI safely and beneficially for humanity. The nonprofit parent retains control.
- No binding promise of perpetual nonprofit status — Musk was aware of commercialization plans, and there was no enforceable contract preventing evolution. His suit is a "bait-and-switch" claim against them, not the other way around.
- Musk's motives — The lawsuit is seen as an attempt to hobble a rival rather than a genuine defense of charity or safety. OpenAI notes Musk's xAI uses OpenAI models and competes directly.
- He and others reassured Musk but emphasize that the mission required scaling via investment, which a pure nonprofit couldn't achieve at the necessary pace.
- Altman has framed OpenAI's evolution as necessary and responsible progress, not betrayal. The company continues to invest heavily in safety and alignment research.
- In response to Musk's broader criticisms over the years, Altman has generally avoided direct personal attacks but defended OpenAI's path as the best way to develop beneficial AGI.
The trial is ongoing, so more direct testimony from Altman is expected. OpenAI maintains confidence in its legal position.
AI Safety in Peril: The Fractured Quest for Responsible Intelligence
The high-stakes trial between Elon Musk and OpenAI underscores a deeper crisis in the AI industry: the erosion of cooperation on what matters most—safety—amid fierce commercial rivalry.
Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015 precisely to mitigate the existential risks of advanced artificial intelligence. He warned of uncontrolled, powerful AI systems potentially posing catastrophic threats to humanity. Yet today, the landscape reveals a troubling irony.Shifting Priorities and Broken CooperationMusk’s early concerns about unchecked power led him to seek greater influence within OpenAI. He attempted to become CEO, proposed merging the organization with Tesla, and as recently as two years ago, explored acquiring it. These moves suggest that, at the time, OpenAI’s evolving for-profit elements were not an absolute barrier. Now, with his own xAI competing aggressively to build ever-more-capable systems, the urgency around “more powerful AI” appears selectively applied.
This is not merely personal drama. It reflects a broader failure among AI leaders. Sam Altman at OpenAI, Dario Amodei at Anthropic, and Musk represent the vanguard of frontier AI development. True safety—addressing alignment, control, and existential risks—requires sustained collaboration on technical and governance challenges. Instead, competition dominates, with lawsuits, public barbs, and talent wars taking center stage.
The problem extends globally. AI is not fundamentally a US-versus-China contest but a human-versus-machine challenge. Legislatures struggle to keep pace with the technology’s breakneck speed. Without proactive cooperation between the world’s leading AI powers and companies, safety measures risk remaining reactive and inadequate.A Bold Proposal for Cooperation and ImpactAI founders and companies have an opportunity—and perhaps a responsibility—to demonstrate a different path.
Proposal: Major AI companies should donate 10% ownership (economic rights) to a shared, independent Foundation dedicated to global human flourishing. Founders could split their personal shares similarly: retaining voting control necessary for effective leadership and innovation, while directing the bulk of unconsumed wealth toward the Foundation.
This structure would allow leaders to continue running their companies competitively on commercial frontiers—advancing technology, creating value, and yes, competing vigorously—while pooling resources for humanity’s benefit. The Foundation could focus on high-impact, scalable interventions, such as:
Cooperation on safety does not require ending competition in commerce. It requires wisdom to separate the two: race boldly to build, but unite urgently to ensure what we build does not endanger our future. A Foundation model for shared ownership and impact could be one practical bridge—turning unprecedented wealth and capability into tangible progress against poverty while modeling the cooperation that AI safety demands.
The alternative is continued fragmentation, where the race for dominance leaves safety as an afterthought. The world—and future generations—deserves better from those shaping humanity’s most powerful technology.
The high-stakes trial between Elon Musk and OpenAI underscores a deeper crisis in the AI industry: the erosion of cooperation on what matters most—safety—amid fierce commercial rivalry.
Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015 precisely to mitigate the existential risks of advanced artificial intelligence. He warned of uncontrolled, powerful AI systems potentially posing catastrophic threats to humanity. Yet today, the landscape reveals a troubling irony.Shifting Priorities and Broken CooperationMusk’s early concerns about unchecked power led him to seek greater influence within OpenAI. He attempted to become CEO, proposed merging the organization with Tesla, and as recently as two years ago, explored acquiring it. These moves suggest that, at the time, OpenAI’s evolving for-profit elements were not an absolute barrier. Now, with his own xAI competing aggressively to build ever-more-capable systems, the urgency around “more powerful AI” appears selectively applied.
This is not merely personal drama. It reflects a broader failure among AI leaders. Sam Altman at OpenAI, Dario Amodei at Anthropic, and Musk represent the vanguard of frontier AI development. True safety—addressing alignment, control, and existential risks—requires sustained collaboration on technical and governance challenges. Instead, competition dominates, with lawsuits, public barbs, and talent wars taking center stage.
The problem extends globally. AI is not fundamentally a US-versus-China contest but a human-versus-machine challenge. Legislatures struggle to keep pace with the technology’s breakneck speed. Without proactive cooperation between the world’s leading AI powers and companies, safety measures risk remaining reactive and inadequate.A Bold Proposal for Cooperation and ImpactAI founders and companies have an opportunity—and perhaps a responsibility—to demonstrate a different path.
Proposal: Major AI companies should donate 10% ownership (economic rights) to a shared, independent Foundation dedicated to global human flourishing. Founders could split their personal shares similarly: retaining voting control necessary for effective leadership and innovation, while directing the bulk of unconsumed wealth toward the Foundation.
This structure would allow leaders to continue running their companies competitively on commercial frontiers—advancing technology, creating value, and yes, competing vigorously—while pooling resources for humanity’s benefit. The Foundation could focus on high-impact, scalable interventions, such as:
- Direct cash transfers to alleviate poverty, leveraging platforms like India’s Aadhaar and UPI for efficient, low-overhead distribution.
- Building equivalent digital public infrastructure in regions where it does not yet exist.
- Funding long-term AI safety research independent of any single company’s incentives.
Cooperation on safety does not require ending competition in commerce. It requires wisdom to separate the two: race boldly to build, but unite urgently to ensure what we build does not endanger our future. A Foundation model for shared ownership and impact could be one practical bridge—turning unprecedented wealth and capability into tangible progress against poverty while modeling the cooperation that AI safety demands.
The alternative is continued fragmentation, where the race for dominance leaves safety as an afterthought. The world—and future generations—deserves better from those shaping humanity’s most powerful technology.
Elon Musk, Sam Altman, And Existential AI Safety https://t.co/HmfzXK8gOS @elonmusk @xAI @ibab @jimmybajimmyba @AmandaAskell @janleike @ch402 @catherineols @GregFeingold @lexxbarn 👆👆 @todor_m_markov @DarioAmodei @drew_bent @DanielaAmodei
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 2, 2026