Musk claims OpenAI violated its founding nonprofit commitments
Microsoft is named as a defendant due to its deep financial ties
The case will be heard by a jury in a federal court in California
A federal court in the United States has scheduled a jury trial in the lawsuit filed by Elon Musk against OpenAI and its leadership. The case centers on claims that the artificial intelligence firm departed from its original nonprofit purpose.
According to a court order issued on Tuesday, the trial will begin on April 27. Jury selection will start that day, followed by daily proceedings expected to continue into May.
The case will be heard in Oakland, California, under US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers. A pretrial conference remains set for March 13.
Elon Musk alleges that OpenAI and its chief executive, Sam Altman, breached founding agreements made when the organization launched in 2015. The lawsuit argues that OpenAI was created as a nonprofit focused on safe and open artificial intelligence.
Court filings state that Musk believes OpenAI later shifted away from that mission. The company introduced for-profit structures and entered large commercial partnerships, according to the complaint.
Elon Musk claims he was misled into supporting the organization. The lawsuit alleges that Altman promoted OpenAI as a counterweight to Google’s DeepMind while planning a different business direction.
Microsoft is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit. The technology company has invested billions of dollars in OpenAI since 2019 and became its largest shareholder after a restructuring last year.
The complaint argues that Microsoft’s involvement contributed to OpenAI’s shift toward profit-driven operations. Musk’s legal team claims these changes conflict with the original nonprofit charter.
OpenAI’s leadership has previously defended its structure. The company has stated that its capped-profit model supports long-term research while maintaining safety goals.
Elon Musk was one of OpenAI’s original co-founders and its largest early financial supporter. He provided tens of millions of dollars in seed funding before leaving the organization in 2018.
OpenAI later gained global attention after releasing ChatGPT in 2022. Musk went on to launch a competing artificial intelligence company, xAI.
The upcoming trial will focus on whether OpenAI’s evolution violated contractual obligations. Jurors will review documents, testimony, and governance changes tied to the firm’s transformation.
Court records show the trial is scheduled to run Monday through Friday. The outcome could shape how nonprofit technology organizations structure commercial partnerships in the future.
The post Elon Musk Lawsuit Against OpenAI to Be Tried Before Jury in April appeared first on CoinCentral.


