Meta, AI entrepreneurs, academics, and other charities and activists are criticizing the startup's plan to shed its ties to its non-profit parent.
In a court filing Wednesday, lawyers for Elon Musk said that he would withdraw his consortium’s eye-popping bid of $94.7 billion for Sam Altman’s OpenAI if its board of directors...
AI is blaming a former OpenAI employee after Grok briefly censored responses about Elon Musk and Donald Trump.
OpenAI is considering granting special voting rights to its nonprofit amid its transition to a for-profit company. By giving the board special voting rights, the company would be able to address criticism it had moved away from its mission of creating AI for the benefit of humanity.
AI has launched Grok 3, which Elon Musk calls its "most advanced AI model yet" while claiming it outperforms OpenAI's GPT-4o.
OpenAI is considering granting new voting rights to its nonprofit board in a move that could help it fight an unsolicited takeover bid from Elon Musk, the Financial Times reported last night. Citing people familiar with the discussions,
OpenAI’s board of directors rejected a $97.4 billion bid from a consortium of investors led by Elon Musk. Bret Taylor, chairman of OpenAI’s board, said the artificial intelligence company is “not for sale.
Somehow, in between gutting the federal government and running Tesla and SpaceX, Elon Musk has found time to launch a $97.4 billion takeover bid for OpenAI, said Kelsey Piper in Vox. That seemingly lowball offer — the ChatGPT-maker is thought to be worth more than $300 billion — was quickly rejected by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman last week.
Elon Musk recently attempted an unsolicited takeover of OpenAI that was rejected. Now the creator of ChatGPT wants to make sure that any future coups from the world's richest man won't be successful.
OpenAI is reportedly exploring the introduction of special voting rights for its non-profit board to maintain control as it faces an unsolicited takeover attempt from Elon Musk, according to the Financial Times.