Summary

Elon Musk has filed a court injunction to block OpenAI’s transition to a fully for-profit business and prevent it from allegedly restricting investors from supporting competitors like his AI startup, xAI.

Musk accuses OpenAI and Microsoft of antitrust violations, claiming they used “group boycotts” to limit funding for rivals while benefitting from shared sensitive information.

OpenAI dismissed the allegations as baseless. The legal battle reflects escalating competition in the booming generative AI industry, valued at $157 billion, with Musk’s xAI emerging as a new challenger.

    • @Wogi
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      663 days ago

      You’re not wrong, but the genie is out of the bottle. VC thinks it’s profitable and it can be done on a home computer so it’s here to stay.

      Buckle up buckaroo.

      • @[email protected]
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        02 days ago

        AI is kinda like nuclear weapons, except without requiring a specific rare element in enriched form to wield.

          • @[email protected]
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            42 days ago

            There’s a difference between corporations profiting off copyrighted data and individuals not profiting…

            • @[email protected]
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              92 days ago

              Yes, but the comment you replied to literally says “and it can be done on a home computer” and you argue against that with copyright laws

              • @[email protected]
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                -22 days ago

                That was for the VCs. VCs don’t care about the LLM on your computer. They care about openAI et al

                • @Wogi
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                  22 days ago

                  They don’t care about the law either.

        • @CeeBee_Eh
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          173 days ago

          Lol, no it can’t. Do you have any idea how many smaller LLMs are out there? Small enough to be trained and fine-tuned on consumer hardware. And most of those are “open” sourced models. Which means tens of thousands already have them on their computers and running locally. This genie will never go back in the bottle.

        • @aesthelete
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          43 days ago

          A far stronger argument IMO is that they’re pretty useless.

          Like if there was an open source clippy I could run on my desktop, would I? No, no I would not.