Elon Musk-led group proposes buying OpenAI for $97.4 billion. OpenAI CEO
says 'no thank you'
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[February 11, 2025] By
MATT O'BRIEN
A group of investors led by Elon Musk is offering about $97.4 billion to
buy the nonprofit behind OpenAI, escalating a dispute with the
artificial intelligence company that Musk helped found a decade ago.
Musk and his own AI startup, xAI, and a consortium of investment firms
want to take control of the ChatGPT maker and revert it to its original
charitable mission as a nonprofit research lab, according to Musk's
attorney Marc Toberoff.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman quickly rejected the unsolicited bid on Musk's
social platform X, saying, “no thank you but we will buy Twitter for
$9.74 billion if you want.”
Musk bought Twitter, now called X, for $44 billion in 2022.
Musk and Altman, who together helped start OpenAI in 2015 and later
competed over who should lead it, have been in a long-running feud over
the startup's direction since Musk resigned from its board in 2018.
Musk, an early OpenAI investor and board member, sued the company last
year, first in a California state court and later in federal court,
alleging it had betrayed its founding aims as a nonprofit research lab
that would benefit the public good by safely building better-than-human
AI. Musk had invested about $45 million in the startup from its founding
until 2018, Toberoff has said.
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The sudden success of ChatGPT two years ago brought worldwide fame and a
new revenue stream to OpenAI and also heightened the internal battles
over the future of the organization and the advanced AI it was trying to
develop. Its nonprofit board fired Altman in late 2023. He came back
days later with a new board.
Now a fast-growing business still controlled by a nonprofit board bound
to its original mission, OpenAI last year announced plans to formally
change its corporate structure. But such changes are complicated. Tax
law requires money or assets donated to a tax-exempt organization to
remain within the charitable sector.
If the initial organization becomes a for-profit, generally, a
conversion is needed where the for-profit pays the fair market value of
the assets to another charitable organization. Even if the nonprofit
OpenAI continues to exist in some way, some experts argue it would have
to be paid fair market value for any assets that get transferred to its
for-profit subsidiaries.
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Elon Musk arrives before the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the
Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
(Kevin Lamarque/Pool Photo via AP, File)
 Lawyers for OpenAI and Musk faced
off in a California federal court last week as a judge weighed
Musk's request for a court order that would block the ChatGPT maker
from converting itself to a for-profit company.
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers hasn't yet ruled on
Musk's request but in the courtroom said it was a “stretch” for Musk
to claim he will be irreparably harmed if she doesn’t intervene to
stop OpenAI from moving forward with its planned transition.
But the judge also raised concerns about OpenAI and its relationship
with business partner Microsoft and said she wouldn’t stop the case
from moving to trial as soon as next year so a jury can decide.
“It is plausible that what Mr. Musk is saying is true. We’ll find
out. He’ll sit on the stand,” she said.
Along with Musk and xAI, others backing the bid announced Monday
include Baron Capital Group, Valor Management, Atreides Management,
Vy Fund, Emanuel Capital Management and Eight Partners VC.
Toberoff said in a statement that if Altman and OpenAI’s current
board “are intent on becoming a fully for-profit corporation, it is
vital that the charity be fairly compensated for what its leadership
is taking away from it: control over the most transformative
technology of our time.”
Musk's attorney also shared a letter he sent in early January to the
attorneys general of California, where OpenAI operates, and
Delaware, where it is incorporated.
Since both state offices must "ensure any such transactional process
relating to OpenAI’s charitable assets provides at least fair market
value to protect the public’s beneficial interest, we assume you
will provide a process for competitive bidding to actually determine
that fair market value,” Toberoff wrote, asking for more information
on the terms and timing of that bidding process.
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