Some of its conflicts stem from decisions made well before the debut of ChatGPT, particularly its unusual shift from an idealistic nonprofit to a big business backed by billions of dollars in investments.
It's too early to tell if OpenAl and its attorneys will beat back a barrage of lawsuits from Elon Musk, The New York Times and bestselling novelists such as John Grisham, not to mention escalating scrutiny from government regulators, or if any of it will stick.
FEUD WITH ELON MUSK
OpenAl isn't waiting for the court process to unfold before publicly defending itself against legal claims made by billionaire Elon Musk, an early funder of OpenAl who now alleges it has betrayed its founding nonprofit mission to benefit humanity as it pursued profits instead.
In its first response since the Tesla CEO sued last week, OpenAl vowed to get the claim thrown out and released emails from Musk that purport to show he supported making OpenAl a for-profit company and even suggested merging it with the electric vehicle maker.
Legal experts have expressed doubt about whether Musk's arguments, centered around an alleged breach of contract, will hold up in court. But it has already forced open the company's internal conflicts about its unusual governance structure, how "open" it should be about its research and how to pursue what's known as artificial general intelligence, or AI systems that can perform just as well as ― or even better than – humans in a wide variety of tasks.
ITS OWN INTERNAL INVESTIGATION
This story is from the Techlife News #645 edition of Techlife News.
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This story is from the Techlife News #645 edition of Techlife News.
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