Musk’s Pre‑Trial Texts Reveal Settlement Push as OpenAI Execs Head to the Stand
Elon Musk reached out to OpenAI co‑founder Greg Brockman on April 25, just two days before jurors were selected in a federal trial that could determine whether the company’s shift from a nonprofit to a public‑benefit corporation violated charitable trust obligations. In a series of text messages obtained by the court, Musk asked whether Brockman was open to settling the dispute that pits Musk’s $38 million donation against claims of unauthorized commercial use.
Brockman replied that a settlement could work if Musk agreed to drop all claims against the individual executives, namely himself and CEO Sam Altman. Musk’s follow‑up was stark: “By the end of this week, you and Sam will be the most hated men in America. If you insist, so it will.” The judge ruled the settlement communications inadmissible, but the tone of the exchange has already shaped public perception of the case.
The lawsuit, filed in Oakland, alleges that Musk’s charitable contribution was diverted to fund OpenAI’s for‑profit ambitions, which culminated in a restructuring that valued the new OpenAI Group PBC at $852 billion. Musk is seeking tens of billions in damages, removal of Altman and Brockman from their leadership roles, and a reversal of the conversion.
At the heart of the trial are Brockman’s personal journals, which Musk’s lawyers secured through discovery. Entries reveal the executive’s private ambitions: he wrote about what would take him to a $1 billion net worth and labeled the nonprofit mission a “lie.” Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers cited those passages when she denied OpenAI’s motion to dismiss, noting they suggest an intent to deceive donors and the public.
OpenAI’s defense contends the journals are out‑of‑context reflections, part of a broader stream of self‑analysis that includes doubts and aspirational thoughts. The company argues the entries do not constitute a corporate plan to convert the nonprofit into a profit‑driven empire.
While Musk dominates the early days of the trial, testifying that he feels “a fool” for funding OpenAI and accusing its leaders of “looting the charity,” his own competitive interests add complexity. His AI venture xAI, recently valued at $250 billion, has used OpenAI technology in its training process, blurring the line between victim and rival.
Now Brockman is set to take the stand on Monday. His testimony is expected to focus on operational details, but the journal excerpts will likely dominate courtroom visuals, projected on a screen for jurors to read. Whether the jury interprets the writings as private ambition or premeditated fraud could tip the scales in a case that has broader implications for how nonprofit AI labs can evolve.
The stakes extend beyond the monetary. A verdict favoring Musk could force OpenAI to unwind its for‑profit structure, potentially reshaping the industry’s approach to scaling AI research. Conversely, a ruling for OpenAI would affirm that a nonprofit can transition to a public‑benefit model while retaining its mission, albeit on a vastly larger commercial scale.
Industry observers note that the case also highlights the growing role of AI news automation in covering such high‑profile tech disputes, as platforms scramble to deliver timely, accurate updates amid a flood of legal filings and public statements.
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