elon musk8 articles
Three Phone Calls and America's AI Safety Order Was Dead
President Trump cancelled a planned executive order on AI safety at the last minute after phone calls from Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and former AI advisor David Sacks, who warned that the proposed measures could slow AI development and jeopardise America's competitive edge over China. The draft order would have established a voluntary system requiring AI companies to submit frontier models to federal agencies for safety testing up to 90 days before release. The order has been shelved for reworking, with critics inside the administration dismissing it as unnecessary fearmongering pushed by AI "doomers."
SpaceX Starship Launch Scrubbed at T-40 Seconds While Crypto Billionaire Books Mars Seat
SpaceX aborted the twelfth Starship test flight with seconds to spare due to a ground equipment failure, specifically a hydraulic pin on the launch tower arm failing to retract. It was the first launch attempt from a new pad using the latest vehicle iteration, making reaching the T-40 second hold point a minor milestone in itself. During the scrub, SpaceX also announced that crypto billionaire Chun Wang will fly on a future Mars flyby mission.

SpaceX's IPO Filing: Monopoly Ambitions, Mounting Losses, and Musk at the Controls
SpaceX has filed for a long-awaited IPO, arguing that its extreme vertical integration across rocket manufacturing, satellite deployment, AI, and data centre infrastructure makes it uniquely positioned to dominate a self-claimed $28.5 trillion total addressable market. Despite revenues of $18.7 billion in FY2025, the company posted a $4.9 billion loss, with losses accelerating into 2026. The filing grants Elon Musk near-total control as CEO, CTO, and board chairman, leaving investors largely betting on his vision and execution.
Musk Lost. Now What? Inside the OpenAI Trial That Shook Silicon Valley
Elon Musk lost his lawsuit against OpenAI, in which he claimed CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman had deceived him about the company's non-profit status. MIT Technology Review's AI reporter and attorney Michelle Kim, who covered the trial, discussed the behind-the-scenes details with editor in chief Mat Honan, exploring key moments from the three-week proceedings. The roundtable also examined the broader implications of the case for the future of the AI industry.
Musk Loses OpenAI Lawsuit on a Technicality, Promises Appeal
A jury unanimously ruled against Elon Musk in his lawsuit against OpenAI, finding that his claims were filed too late and are barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. Musk had argued that OpenAI's founders breached a charitable trust and unjustly enriched themselves by abandoning the company's nonprofit mission, but the jury determined he had reason to suspect this before the legal deadlines had passed. Musk has announced he will appeal the decision, dismissing the outcome as a "calendar technicality" rather than a ruling on the merits of his case.
OpenAI Eyes Legal Action After Apple's ChatGPT Integration Flopped
OpenAI is reportedly frustrated with its ChatGPT integration into Apple products, feeling the partnership fell far short of expectations and may have damaged its brand. Apple's design choices — such as requiring users to explicitly say "ChatGPT" to activate the feature and displaying responses in small windows — made the integration easy to overlook, and OpenAI now suspects Apple deliberately failed to promote it. As a result, OpenAI is exploring legal options, including a possible breach of contract claim, while both companies attempt to resolve the dispute before it reaches court.

Musk Loses OpenAI Case Before It Even Got Started
Elon Musk lost his federal lawsuit against OpenAI after a jury unanimously ruled — in under two hours — that his claims were filed too late, with the presiding judge immediately accepting the verdict. Because the case was dismissed on statute of limitations grounds, the jury never ruled on Musk's core allegations that OpenAI's founders had betrayed its original nonprofit mission by partnering with Microsoft and shifting to a for-profit structure. Musk's legal team has announced plans to appeal, while OpenAI's attorneys argued the verdict reflects a deliberate delay by a competitor who "couldn't compete in the marketplace."
Five Things the Musk vs Altman Trial Actually Taught Us
A high-profile trial in California pitted Elon Musk against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, with Musk alleging that Altman betrayed the company's founding non-profit mission and effectively "stole a charity." Over three weeks, the case featured prominent witnesses including Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, many of whom contradicted Musk's claims, while Altman's own trustworthiness and financial conflicts of interest also came under intense scrutiny. The trial additionally exposed the personal and political dynamics of Silicon Valley power, including revelations about Musk's relationship with Neuralink executive Shivon Zilis and explosive behind-the-scenes text messages, with the jury's verdict now awaited.