How to Uncover the Truth in the Musk vs. Altman OpenAI Lawsuit Documents: A Step-by-Step Analysis
Introduction
When the first round of the legal battle between Elon Musk and Sam Altman concluded, the jury dismissed the case due to statute of limitations. Yet, the documents released during the trial tell a compelling story. For anyone wanting to understand whether Musk’s core claim—that Altman deceived him into backing OpenAI as a not-for-profit before pivoting to a for-profit model—holds water, reading those documents is essential. This guide walks you through the key evidence step by step, helping you see why even critics of Musk admit he appears to have made a valid point.

What You Need
- Access to the court filings from the Musk vs. Altman case (available on PACER or through legal news outlets that published them)
- A few hours of focused time (documents are lengthy, especially business registrations)
- Basic familiarity with AI terminology (e.g., AGI, governance)
- Note-taking tools (digital or paper) to track dates, statements, and inconsistencies
Step-by-Step Analysis
Step 1: Gather and Organize the Key Documents
Start by collecting all released emails, mission drafts, and board meeting notes from the discovery phase. Focus on communications between June 2015 and early 2016, when the founding principles were being set. Business registration forms can be skimmed; the real insight comes from the correspondence.
Step 2: Examine the Early Altman–Musk Exchange (June 2015)
Find the email from June 24, 2015, where Altman writes to Musk: “This mission would be to create the first general AI and use it for individual empowerment, ie, the distributed version of the future that seems the safest. More generally, safety should be a first-class requirement.” Altman explicitly states the technology “would be owned by the foundation and used 'for the good of the world',” with five board members making decisions when interpretation is unclear. Musk’s reply the next day: “Agree on all.”
Step 3: Analyze the Governance Discussions (October 2015)
Move to October 2015, when serious funding talks begin. Musk writes to Altman about governance: “This is critical. I don't want to fund something that goes in what turns out to be the wrong direction.” Altman’s response reassures him: “very focused on getting this right.” Highlight how Altman never pushes back on the nonprofit requirement.
Step 4: Review the Mission Statement Drafts (December 2015)
In December 2015, Musk sends Altman a draft mission statement that includes “the goal of advancing digital intelligence in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole, unencumbered by an obligation to generate financial returns.” Altman edits it to add: “Because we don't have any financial obligations, we can focus on the maximal positive human impact and disseminating AI technology as broadly as possible.” Note the explicit language rejecting profit motives.

Step 5: Track the Shift to For-Profit and Musk’s Reaction
Later documents (from 2016 onward) show OpenAI’s gradual restructuring into a capped-profit entity and eventually a full for-profit corporation. Musk’s emails during this period express repeated frustration about the departure from the original charter. The internal timeline makes clear that the original nonprofit promise was central to Musk’s investment.
Tips for a Thorough Analysis
- Remember the context: Musk’s historical fears about AGI control colored his enthusiasm, but the documents show his sincerity at the time. Don’t let his later persona color your reading of early evidence.
- Watch for hyperbole: Musk is known for histrionic statements—separate emotional language from concrete promises.
- Check the statute of limitations: The case was dismissed on timing grounds, not substance. The documents still prove Altman’s verbal commitments to nonprofit ideals.
- Cross-reference with board decisions: Identify when the first for-profit move was approved and who was on the board then.
- Stay objective: The evidence may make you sympathize with Musk on this one issue, even if you dislike his other behavior. As the saying goes, “the worst person you know just made a great point.”
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