Elon Musk Seeks to Restore OpenAI’s Nonprofit Status in Court
Elon Musk’s latest filing in the lawsuit he lodged against OpenAI pivots on a dramatic shift in the remedies he seeks. In a motion submitted this week, Musk asks the court to abandon the earlier damages award and instead order that OpenAI’s profits be returned to the charitable organization he co‑founded, and that Sam Altman be removed from the company’s board.
The request rides on Musk’s allegation that OpenAI abandoned its nonprofit charter and transformed into a “wealth machine” for its executives, Microsoft and other Silicon Valley insiders. He contends that the organization’s founders, including Altman and Greg Brockman, made false promises when soliciting donations, labor and public goodwill, assuring supporters that the entity would operate for the benefit of humanity.
Judge Yvonne Gonzalez‑Rodriguez, who presided over earlier motions, pushed back hard on Musk’s new strategy. In her written response, she noted, “That is not the law,” and warned that allowing continuous accrual of damages would let any charitable donor sue at any time without limitation. The judge clarified that the court will not instruct a jury on such a theory, effectively closing the door on Musk’s bid to keep the case open indefinitely.
Undeterred, Musk’s counsel argues that the revised remedies are “strictly tied to his purpose in bringing this lawsuit: to prevent the subordination of a public charity—one he co‑founded and primarily supported during its formative years—to private, for‑profit interests.” The filing insists that the core of the case is OpenAI’s alleged breach of charitable trust, fraud and unjust enrichment.
To justify the sweeping relief he seeks, Musk points to California law that gives courts broad equitable authority to remedy misconduct involving charitable trusts. He cites a statute that allows a plaintiff with standing to “enjoin, correct, obtain damages for or to otherwise remedy a breach of a charitable trust.” His lawyers emphasize that the law could empower a jury to order the return of ill‑gotten gains calculated by Musk’s expert witnesses.
OpenAI has labeled the lawsuit “baseless” and warned that Musk’s demands are untested in court. The organization argues that the transformation from nonprofit to for‑profit was a legitimate business decision aimed at scaling its artificial‑intelligence research, not a covert effort to enrich insiders.
The dispute is set to move to a jury trial this month. Jurors will have to interpret a vague statutory provision and decide whether Musk’s proposed remedy—returning profits to the charitable entity and reshaping OpenAI’s governance—fits within the court’s equitable powers. The outcome could have far‑reaching implications for how tech startups structure charitable components and for the accountability of high‑profile founders.
While the trial looms, both sides remain entrenched. Musk continues to portray the case as a defense of the original charitable mission, whereas OpenAI frames the lawsuit as an unfounded attack on its business model. Observers note that the case also underscores broader tensions in Silicon Valley over the balance between profit motives and public‑benefit commitments.
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