'Feuding tech bros' go head to head in legal showdown. But what does it mean for the future of AI?

Elon Musk and Sam Altman battle it out in court, and the outcome could carry significant ramifications for how AI development is shaped.

Two cutouts of two men's heads appear on either side of a person holding a phone with a green background and a red flower-shape logo on the screen.
Experts believe the legal battle between Elon Musk and Sam Altman could shape the future of AI regulations.
(Image credit: Anadolu via Getty Images)

There was a time when Elon Musk and Sam Altman were friends. But the two tech billionaires are now embroiled in a bitter legal battle in the United States that could reshape not just OpenAI, the artificial intelligence (AI) firm behind ChatGPT they cofounded in 2015, but also the future of the technology more broadly.

Launched by Musk in 2024, the lawsuit is the culmination of a years-long feud that centers on the evolution of OpenAI from a non-profit to a for-profit enterprise.

Rob Nicholls
Senior Research Associate in Media and Communications, University of Sydney

Dr Rob Nicholls is a senior research associate in media and communications at the University of Sydney. His research interests focus on the intersection of regulation and technology. Rob has had a forty-year career concentrating on competition, regulation and governance. His first degree was in electronics and communications engineering from the University of Birmingham and he was awarded his PhD and MA by UNSW Sydney. Before moving to academia, he worked for Webb Henderson, the ACCC and spent twelve years as a client-facing consultant at Gilbert + Tobin, including as a partner. Rob is an accredited mediator.

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