ChatGPT creator OpenAI slams Elon Musk’s claims as ‘incoherent’ in Microsoft-backed start-up’s first legal response to tech billionaire’s lawsuit
“Seeing the remarkable technological advances OpenAI has achieved, Musk now wants that success for himself,” the company’s lawyers wrote.
Musk and OpenAI did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Elon Musk wanted OpenAI to merge with Tesla, start-up founders say
The dispute between two of tech’s biggest players touches on core issues of AI safety and accessibility, and has spilled over into the larger start-up world. On Monday, billionaire venture capitalist and OpenAI investor Vinod Khosla told Bloomberg TV that Musk could not sue his way to artificial general intelligence.
OpenAI also argues in the filing that if pretrial fact-finding and information-sharing – known as discovery – begins in the case, Musk would use the suit to get access to OpenAI’s “proprietary records and technology”, and warned that demands for discovery “would need to be carefully policed”.
OpenAI also asked that the court designate the suit a “complex case”, which under California rules is meant to avoid making the case unnecessarily burdensome for the court and the parties involved. Cases are typically deemed complex and assigned to specially designated judges when they involve complicated and technical issues, as well as multiple parties and numerous claims.