Clashing ambitions |
When two billionaires with unlimited resources battle over world-changing technology, sudden escalations shouldn’t be surprising. |
A group of investors led by Elon Musk made an unsolicited $97.4 billion bid for the non-profit that controls OpenAI, The Wall Street Journal reported, complicating Sam Altman’s efforts to turn the ChatGPT-creator into a for-profit company. |
“It’s time for OpenAI to return to the open-source, safety-focused force for good it once was,” Musk said in a statement through his lawyer. |
The Tesla chief argues that Altman will not only shortchange the non-profit parent, but consolidate unchecked AI dominance. |
Altman dismissed the news on X, the platform Musk owns: “No thank you but we will buy twitter for $9.74 billion if you want.” |
Internally, Altman told OpenAI staff that Musk’s offer wasn’t aligned with OpenAI’s mission, The Information reported late Monday. |
Early Tuesday in Paris he told Axios that “OpenAI is not for sale.” |
What’s OpenAI really worth? |
Last month, Musk’s team requested OpenAI accept bidding for the non-profit, citing concerns that Altman & Co. would undervalue it. |
OpenAI has pegged its non-profit controller’s value at roughly $40 billion. But rejecting Musk’s far higher offer — the only other one on the table — suggests the initial “fair value” was not so fair. |
The jargon and public barbs shroud a very strange situation indeed. |
For Altman to turn OpenAI into a for-profit company, he has to buy it from the non-profit entity that currently owns it. But Altman sits on the board of said non-profit. |
Meaning he effectively wants to buy something from himself. |
…while naming his own price. |
The fact Altman shirked Musk’s jumbo offer — not to mention Musk’s claim to match any higher offer — suggests a few things: |
- Altman thinks $97.4 billion is not a fair value
- Altman isn’t really focused on the money
- Neither is Musk
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Power struggles |
Musk and Altman co-founded OpenAI in 2015, structuring it under a non-profit to ensure it answered to humanity, rather than shareholders. |
Musk left in 2019, and Altman launched a for-profit subsidiary that has allowed OpenAI to raise billions. He’s now trying to spin that out as a stand-alone entity while giving the non-profit an ownership stake. |
Musk says this move thwarts that original ambition and hands Altman commercial dominance and big money. |
The timeline leading up to this is worth revisiting: |
- In November 2023, OpenAI’s board tried and failed to oust Altman as CEO
- Top executives and engineers have left since then, citing safety concerns
- OpenAI’s latest funding talks could value it at $300 billion
- OpenAI is a key player in Project Stargate, a White House initiative that doesn’t include Musk
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The intrigue will surely deepen. |
Still, win or lose Musk’s offer is forcing a necessary debate on who should control the most consequential technology of our generation. |