Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 10, 2025. (REUTERS File)

- California declines to join Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI, citing lack of public benefit and concerns over Musk’s personal interests.
- Musk sued OpenAI over nonprofit mission shift; attorney general won’t join, questioning whether lawsuit truly serves California’s public interest.
- OpenAI needs nonprofit restructuring to raise $40B; Musk, once a cofounder, claims changes betray OpenAI’s original mission for humanity.
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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – The California attorney general’s office declined to join a lawsuit by Elon Musk against OpenAI, the agency wrote in a letter made public on Tuesday, saying that the office did not see how Musk’s action serves the public interest of the state.
Musk, a co-founder of the ChatGPT maker, is now in a feud with his co-founder Sam Altman, the current OpenAI chief executive over the firm’s future.
OpenAI wants to remove its nonprofit board as its controlling power in exchange for a valuable equity stake. Musk’s suit argues that this would threaten the nonprofit’s mission and he had asked the state to join the lawsuit.
Musk-Led Consortium Made $97 Billion Bid for OpenAI Control
In the letter dated Monday, the attorney general said Musk had not adequately shown that doing so would benefit the public and that Musk appeared to want to use OpenAI’s charitable assets for his own purposes. In February, a Musk-led consortium made an unsolicited $97 billion bid for control of OpenAI.
The California attorney general’s office would also need to approve OpenAI’s proposed nonprofit transition because OpenAI is based in California. Entities including Meta and a group of philanthropic leaders have written to the attorney general urging it to stop OpenAI’s transition.
OpenAI has argued that it needs to remove the nonprofit’s controlling role in order to raise funds from investors. To secure a $40 billion fundraising round, the company must complete its transition by the end of the year. The nonprofit will retain a stake in OpenAI that will become increasingly valuable as the company grows, providing resources to carry out its mission, the company argues.
Musk and Altman cofounded ChatGPT maker OpenAI in 2015, but Musk left before the company became a technology star. Last year, Musk, who is also the CEO of electric carmaker Tesla, sued OpenAI and Altman, accusing OpenAI of straying from its founding mission – to develop AI for the good of humanity, not corporate profit.
OpenAI and Altman have denied the allegations. The two parties are set to begin a jury trial in spring next year.
Musk also created his own AI firm, xAI, in 2023, and Altman alleges that Musk has been trying to slow down a competitor.
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(Reporting by Anna Tong in San Francisco; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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