Musk v. Altman Trial Begins with Jury Selection in Oakland
Musk seeks up to $150 billion and the removal of OpenAI leaders, while the judge will decide liability and remedies after the advisory jury phase.
- On Monday, April 27, 2026, a federal civil trial began in Oakland, California, with Elon Musk suing OpenAI CEO Sam Altman over the company's transformation from nonprofit to for-profit entity valued at $852 billion.
- Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015 as a nonprofit lab dedicated to safe artificial intelligence for public benefit, but he claims the company's shift toward a for-profit model with Microsoft backing betrayed that founding promise.
- Legal claims allege fraud, breach of charitable trust, and unjust enrichment totaling more than $130 billion in damages. Testimony expected from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, former OpenAI board members, and other executives about governance decisions.
- Nine jurors will render an advisory verdict on liability during a four-week trial, but U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers will make final decisions on remedies and any structural changes to OpenAI.
- The trial's outcome could jeopardize OpenAI's planned initial public offering later this year, while setting precedent for governance structures at artificial intelligence companies worldwide.
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164 Articles
Musk claims that OpenAI, Altman and Microsoft betrayed OpenAI's original mission as a non-profit organization to benefit humanity and would be looking for $150 billion in compensation
Elon Musk, Sam Altman head to court in trial over Open AI's founding vision
Technology tycoons Elon Musk and Sam Altman are poised to face off in a high-stakes trial revolving around the alleged betrayal, deceit and unbridled ambition that blurred their once-shared vision for the development of artificial intelligence.
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