Elon Musk’s $97 billion OpenAI bid would give the DOGE chief even more power in the AI race

A group of investors led by Elon Musk has given OpenAI an unsolicited offer of $97.4 billion to buy the nonprofit part of OpenAI. An attorney for the group submitted the bid to OpenAI Monday, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Per the Journal, the other investors in the group include Valor Equity Partners, Baron Capital, Atreides Management, Vy Capital, and 8VC, a venture firm led by Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale. Ari Emanuel, CEO of sports and entertainment company Endeavor, is also backing the offer through his investment fund.

OpenAI uses a hybrid business structure that consists of a nonprofit parent entity (OpenAI, Inc.) and a for-profit subsidiary (OpenAI LP, referred to as a “capped-profit” company). In part because of the extraordinary high costs of inventing and training AI models, OpenAI created a for-profit subsidiary in 2019 that has let it raise billions from Microsoft and others. Altman is now in the process of turning the subsidiary into a traditional company and spinning out the nonprofit. The nonprofit would, however, own equity in the new for-profit. (Neither OpenAI nor Musk immediately responded to Fast Company’s requests for comment.)

The situation may seem familiar to OpenAI board member Bret Taylor, who was chairman of Twitter’s board of directors when Musk bid for, then bought, the company in October 2022. Taylor left Twitter soon after, along with most of the board.

The unsolicited bid ratchets up Musk’s ongoing battle with OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman. Musk, who cofounded OpenAI with Altman and others in 2015 (and now leads the Department of Government Efficiency), has already filed two lawsuits against OpenAI complaining that the company has deviated from its original nonprofit mission and is now prioritizing profit over public benefit. In the second lawsuit, filed in November 2024, OpenAI’s backer Microsoft was named as a defendant.

Musk and the other investors could conceivably end up owning a large share of the for-profit AI. Musk’s AI company, xAI, has said that it’s building large language models that are less constrained by political correctness and more focused on objective truth. OpenAI, meanwhile, has been focused on developing frontier models that achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI), or AI systems that can do most “economically valuable” tasks better than humans.  

OpenAI’s for-profit arm is growing quickly. Altman is currently in discussions with the Japanese investment bank, SoftBank Group, which may invest up to $40 billion in the AI company, upping its value to about $300 billion.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91276262/elon-musk-97-billion-openai-bid?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 6mo | 10 févr. 2025, 22:30:04


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

How AI will radically change military command structures

Despite two centuries of evolution, the structure of a modern military staff would be recognizable to Napoleon. At the same time, m

20 août 2025, 17:20:02 | Fast company - tech
This startup knows what AI is saying about your brand

Internet users are increasingly turning to AI tools like ChatGPT, rath

20 août 2025, 14:50:08 | Fast company - tech
OpenAI gave GPT-5 an emotional lobotomy, and it crippled the model

It’s rare for a tech titan to show any weakness or humanity. Yet even OpenAI’s notoriously understated CEO Sam Altman had to admit this week that the rollout of the company’s

20 août 2025, 14:50:06 | Fast company - tech
An engineer explains how AI can prevent satellite disasters in space

With satellite mega-constellations like SpaceX’s Starlink deploying thousands of spacecraft, monitoring their health has become an enormous challenge. Traditional methods can’t easily scale

20 août 2025, 12:30:15 | Fast company - tech
Landline phones are back—and they’re helping kids connect safely with friends

In today’s world, communication is largely done through one of two methods: smartphones or social media. Young children, however, rarely have access to either—and experts say they shouldn’t have a

20 août 2025, 12:30:12 | Fast company - tech