Elon Musk is suing OpenAI and Sam Altman for allegedly abandoning OpenAIâs original mission to develop artificial intelligence to benefit humanity.
âOpenAI, Inc. has been transformed into a closed-source de facto subsidiary of the largest technology company in the world: Microsoft,â Muskâs lawyers wrote in the lawsuit, which was filed late on Thursday in San Francisco.
âUnder its new board, it is not just developing but is refining an AGI [Artificial General Intelligence] to maximize profits for Microsoft, rather than for the benefit of humanity,â claims the filing. âOn information and belief, GPT-4 is an AGI algorithm.â
OpenAI, which counts Musk among its cofounders, has a unique corporate structure. It is a nonprofit charged with safeguarding humanity against artificial general intelligence, or AGI, a hypothetical AI system that can surpass humans at most tasks. But in late 2019, after Musk left the companyâs board, it established a for-profit arm with a less altruistic focus. The explosive popularity of ChatGPT and demand for the underlying GPT-4 AI model has made that side of the company worth a reported $80 billionâand drawn the ire of Musk. Last year, the billionaire told CNBC he was âthe reason that OpenAI exists,â thanks to his past investments.
The lawsuit takes aim at OpenAIâs relationship with Microsoft, which has invested around $13 billion into the AI companyâs for-profit business in a controversial alliance that has attracted scrutiny from regulators in the US, the EU, and the UK. The UK regulator, the Competition and Markets Authority, said in December that it was investigating to see whether the two companies had effectively merged. Neither OpenAI nor Microsoft immediately replied to WIREDâs request for comment.
The lawsuit alleges that the internal design of GPT-4, the companyâs latest model, remains secret because Microsoft and OpenAI stand to make a fortune by selling access to the AI model to the public. âGPT-4 is hence the opposite of âOpen AI,ââ the filing reads.
AI systems exist across a spectrum of openness, ranging from fully open source to fully closed, depending on how much their inner workings are shared with researchers and members of the public. Those in favor of open source argue the approach allows greater transparency and potential for innovation. Arguments against include warnings that it makes powerful AI models potentially available to criminals or geopolitical adversaries. Metaâs Llama 2 model is free to download, modify, and deployâthough it does have some limitations on useâwhile GPT-4 is not.
âLetâs remember that Elon Musk has multiple competing AI efforts, but notably [he founded] xAI, a competing AI company,â says David Shrier, professor of practice, AI, and innovation at Londonâs Imperial College Business School. He adds that the lawsuit may be an attempt to slow down xAIâs competition.
Regardless, Shrier believes Muskâs lawsuit reflects broader anxiety about the commercial success of OpenAI, which pledges in its founding charter to avoid enabling uses of AI or AGI that harm humanity or unduly concentrate power. âHeâs got a point insofar as OpenAIâs original mission appears to be somewhat different from where the business is headed today,â Shrier says.