-
Windswept Kazakh rail hub at the heart of China-Europe trade
-
Duffy takes five as NZ tear through West Indies to arrow in on win
-
Kushner returns to team Trump, as ethical questions swirl
-
Thai PM dissolves parliament, paving way for national elections
-
Volodymyr Zelensky: Under-pressure wartime leader used to defying the odds
-
Reddit files legal challenge to Australia social media ban
-
Crypto mogul Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years for fraud
-
West Indies on the ropes at 98-6 in second New Zealand Test
-
Crypto mogul Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years for fraud: US media
-
White House blames Trump's bandaged hand on handshakes
-
'In her prime': Rare blooming of palm trees in Rio
-
Steelers' Watt in hospital for evaluation of 'lung situation'
-
Villa and Forest win in Europa League as Celtic thrashed by Roma
-
Revived Patriots face Bills test in hunt for playoffs
-
Dow, S&P 500 end at records despite AI fears
-
Make your own Mickey Mouse clip - Disney embraces AI
-
US Treasury chief seeks looser regulation at financial stability panel
-
Ex-NBA player Jason Collins says he's fighting stage 4 brain cancer
-
Nigeria choose AFCON squad stacked with star strikers
-
Trump 'frustrated' with Kyiv, Moscow over talks on war
-
OpenAI beefs up GPT models in AI race with Google
-
Dark, wet, choppy: Machado's secret sea escape from Venezuela
-
US bringing seized tanker to port as Venezuela war fears build
-
IOC calls for full reintegration of Russians to youth competitions
-
Cyclone causes blackout, flight chaos in Brazil's Sao Paulo
-
Forest win at Utrecht in Europa League as Rangers lose again
-
Trump 'frustrated' with Kyiv, Moscow over talks
-
2024 Eurovision winner Nemo returns trophy over Israel's participation
-
US bringing seized tanker to port, as Venezuela war threats build
-
Fan group calls for 'immediate halt' to World Cup ticket sales
-
Johnson's Grand Slam Track files for bankruptcy, vows to return
-
Fan group calls for 'immediate halt' to World Cup tickets
-
US says tanker seizure targeted Venezuelan leader Maduro's 'regime'
-
De Kock stars as South Africa win big to level India T20 series
-
Turnaround for Greece as Pierrakakis tapped to lead Eurogroup
-
US still pushing big territorial concessions from Ukraine: Zelensky
-
Nepal estimates millions in damages from September protests
-
UN demands probe after attack on Myanmar hospital
-
Make your own AI Mickey Mouse - Disney embraces new tech
-
Trump's mixed record on ending wars
-
Morocco include injured captain Hakimi in AFCON squad
-
Steam - and uncertainty - rise from Serbia's shuttered refinery
-
Olympic ski champion Gisin to undergo neck surgery after training crash
-
Time magazine names 'Architects of AI' as Person of the Year
-
Floodworks on Athens 'oasis' a tough sell among locals
-
More than 600 British Empire artefacts stolen from museum: police
-
Ben Sulayem to stand unopposed as FIA election goes ahead
-
OpenAI, Disney to let fans create AI videos in landmark deal
-
US trade gap shrinks to narrowest since 2020 after tariff hikes
-
NATO chief says a joint plan to end Ukraine war would 'test' Putin
OpenAI rejects Musk's accusations of 'betrayal'
OpenAI, the firm behind ChatGPT, on Tuesday denied Elon Musk's accusations of "betrayal" of its original mission and said it would push to have them dismissed in court.
The boss of Tesla, SpaceX and X was one of the co-founders of OpenAI in 2015 along with Sam Altman but left the organization in 2018 and is now one of its most vocal critics.
Musk launched a legal case against OpenAI last week, arguing in documents filed in a San Francisco court that the firm was always intended as a nonprofit entity.
"We intend to move to dismiss all of Elon's claims," OpenAI and its executives said in a blog post.
OpenAI captured the public imagination in late 2022 with the release of its chatbot ChatGPT, which can generate poems and essays and even succeed in exams.
The firm started as a non-profit dedicated to developing "artificial general intelligence" (AGI), a term loosely defined as a kind of AI that would outstrip human capabilities on all measures of intelligence.
The aim was for OpenAI to guarantee that such technology would be safe for humanity.
OpenAI has received about $13 billion in investment from Microsoft in recent years, and both companies market AI services to developers and individuals.
On Tuesday, Altman and other executives from the Silicon Valley start-up detailed their counter-arguments, with supporting emails.
"We're sad that it's come to this with someone whom we've deeply admired -- someone who inspired us to aim higher, then told us we would fail, started a competitor, and then sued us when we started making meaningful progress towards OpenAI’s mission without him," they said in a blog post.
In 2017, "we all understood we were going to need a lot more capital to succeed at our mission -- billions of dollars per year, which was far more than any of us, especially Elon, thought we'd be able to raise as the non-profit", they said.
The following year, Musk suggested in an email that OpenAI be attached "to Tesla as its cash cow".
But in the face of refusal from the team, Musk "soon chose to leave OpenAI, saying that our probability of success was 0," adding he planned to build an AGI competitor within Tesla.
"When he left in late February 2018, he told our team he was supportive of us finding our own path to raising billions of dollars," said the OpenAI blog post.
Altman and his colleagues also said that their company is providing free AI access to organizations and countries, including Albania, which "is using OpenAI's tools to accelerate its EU accession by as much as 5.5 years."
C.Cassis--PC