Sam Altman testified that Elon Musk wanted complete control of OpenAI and pushed to fold it into Tesla; the trial now centers on two surviving claims—breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment—with Judge Yvonne... Satya Nadella’s testimony matters because Microsoft is accused of aiding and abetting a breach of...

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: What did Sam Altman testify about Elon Musk’s role in OpenAI’s early structure and commercial direction, how did testimony from Satya Nadell. Article summary: Sam Altman testified that Elon Musk pushed OpenAI toward a structure and commercial path Musk could control, including attempts to merge OpenAI with Tesla or form a for-profit entity. OpenAI’s defense was supported by te. Topic tags: general, general web, user generated. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "# Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Testifies in Elon Musk’s OpenAI Lawsuit. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella testified in court in Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI, where the case centers" source context "Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Testifies in Elon Musk's OpenAI Lawsuit" Reference image 2: visual subject "# Microsoft C
At the Oakland federal trial over OpenAI’s future, Sam Altman’s testimony sharpened OpenAI’s central defense: Elon Musk was not simply trying to preserve a nonprofit mission, OpenAI argues, but had pushed for a structure and commercial direction he could control. The case is being heard in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California before Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, and it stems from Musk’s August 2024 lawsuit accusing OpenAI, Altman, Greg Brockman, and Microsoft of abandoning OpenAI’s nonprofit founding mission.[1][
18]
Musk’s side says he was persuaded to give $38 million to OpenAI, only to see the organization move away from its mission to benefit humanity and toward a for-profit corporation.[18] OpenAI, Altman, Brockman, and Microsoft deny allegations that they looted OpenAI’s charity through the Microsoft partnership for personal gain.[
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Altman rejected Musk’s claim that he betrayed OpenAI’s founding mission.[18] More pointedly, reporting on his testimony says Altman told the court that Musk wanted complete control of OpenAI and pushed for the company to become part of Tesla before Musk left the startup he helped found.
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Sam Altman testified that Elon Musk wanted complete control of OpenAI and pushed to fold it into Tesla; the trial now centers on two surviving claims—breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment—with Judge Yvonne...
Sam Altman testified that Elon Musk wanted complete control of OpenAI and pushed to fold it into Tesla; the trial now centers on two surviving claims—breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment—with Judge Yvonne... Satya Nadella’s testimony matters because Microsoft is accused of aiding and abetting a breach of charitable trust; the provided excerpts document Bret Taylor’s appearance but not the substance of his testimony.
Reported remedies include structural relief such as Altman’s ouster and a fight over OpenAI’s for profit direction, but the available excerpts do not provide a complete remedies list.
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Open related pageJury selection began on April 27, 2026, in one of the most consequential tech trials in recent memory: Elon Musk versus Sam Altman, with the future structure of OpenAI hanging in the balance. The case is being heard in the U.S. District Court for the Northe...
When the first week of Musk v. OpenAI ended on Thursday, April 30, Elon Musk had occupied the witness stand for nearly two full days, delivered some of the most televised Silicon Valley testimony since the early social media antitrust hearings, and set the...
Microsoft CEO and OpenAI Co-founder who both helped oust Sam Altman take the stand Testimony from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever highlighted competing narratives Monday in the legal battle between Elon Musk and OpenAI, as j...
That testimony fits the broader defense theory OpenAI has been presenting to jurors. In opening statements, OpenAI lawyer William Savitt said the case exists because “Mr. Musk didn’t get his way with OpenAI,” and argued that Musk used funding promises to pressure founders, tried to take control of OpenAI, sought a Tesla merger, and wanted to form a for-profit company in which he would own more than 50%.[12]
OpenAI’s argument is designed to undercut Musk’s claim that he is now defending OpenAI’s nonprofit purity. The defense is effectively saying Musk was comfortable with commercialization when he could dominate the structure. Reuters-based reporting similarly said Altman testified that Musk was interested in seizing control of OpenAI and making money from it.[30]
The Google rivalry also matters to the narrative. Altman said he almost did not start OpenAI because he believed Google was already so far ahead in artificial intelligence.[4] OpenAI’s counsel, meanwhile, argued that what Musk cared about was not OpenAI’s nonprofit status but winning the AI race with Google.[
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Satya Nadella’s role matters because Microsoft is not just a background investor in this case. ABC7 reported that Nadella took the stand as Musk pursued Microsoft for aiding and abetting a breach of charitable trust, part of the broader case over OpenAI’s structure and mission.[3]
The available excerpts do not provide a detailed account of what Nadella said on the stand. What they do establish is that Nadella’s testimony, alongside testimony from OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, highlighted the competing narratives in the case.[3] Because Musk’s claims also target the Microsoft relationship, Nadella’s testimony was important to OpenAI’s defense even if the provided record does not support a more specific claim about his exact answers.[
3][
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Bret Taylor’s testimony is even more limited in the provided material. KTVU reported that Taylor, OpenAI’s board chair, finished testifying shortly before Altman was sworn in.[16] The excerpts do not include the substance of Taylor’s testimony, so it would be unsupported to say he made a particular statement about Musk, Tesla, Microsoft, or OpenAI’s nonprofit commitments.
The strongest witness support for OpenAI’s “control” narrative in the provided excerpts comes from Altman and Brockman. Brockman testified that Musk “gave up” on OpenAI after learning he would not have control, and described Musk reacting angrily in a meeting; Brockman also maintained that OpenAI’s mission had always been his priority.[19]
The case has narrowed. The surviving trial claims are breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment.[27] Separately, reporting on Nadella’s testimony describes Musk as suing Microsoft for aiding and abetting a breach of charitable trust.[
3]
That narrowing is important. The public fight may sound like a sweeping referendum on OpenAI’s identity, but the legal question now turns on whether Musk can prove the remaining equitable claims and whether OpenAI, Altman, Brockman, or Microsoft were unjustly enriched or breached obligations tied to OpenAI’s charitable mission.[27][
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The clearest remedy documented in the provided reporting is structural and personal: Musk is seeking Altman’s ouster from OpenAI leadership.[16]
A separate trial recap also described Musk as seeking a court order requiring OpenAI to abandon its for-profit corporate conversion and return to a nonprofit structure.[2] The available excerpts do not provide a complete, court-filed list of all remedies still available, so the safest reading is that Musk is pursuing structural relief affecting OpenAI’s governance and direction, with Altman’s role specifically in view.[
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The jury’s role is limited. Reporting on the trial structure says the liability phase was set to run until around May 21, after which the case would go to the jury for an advisory verdict; Judge Gonzalez Rogers would then proceed to the remedies phase.[31] Other reporting similarly states that the jury’s verdict is advisory only and that Judge Gonzalez Rogers will make the final decision on both liability and remedies.[
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That means a jury finding for Musk would not automatically remove Altman or restructure OpenAI. It would signal how jurors view the evidence, but the judge would still decide whether liability exists and what remedy, if any, should follow.[27][
31]
If the judge finds for Musk on one or both surviving claims, the next fight could focus on governance and structure, including the reported request to remove Altman and any order affecting OpenAI’s commercial direction.[16][
2] If the judge finds for OpenAI, Musk’s remaining claims could fail even after an advisory jury verdict, because the judge retains final authority over liability and remedies.[
27]
Altman’s testimony reframed the trial around control: Musk says OpenAI betrayed a nonprofit promise, while OpenAI says Musk once pushed for a commercial structure he could dominate.[12][
18][
20] The decisive moment may not be the jury’s advisory verdict, but Judge Gonzalez Rogers’ final ruling on the two surviving claims and any structural remedy that follows.[
27][
31]
Sam Altman almost didn't even start OpenAI, now considered a leader in AI, because he thought Google was so far ahead in artificial intelligence that doing so would be hopeless. That was one of the revelations the OpenAI CEO made on Tuesday when he took the...
In his opening statement, OpenAI lawyer William Savitt told jurors "we are here because Mr. Musk didn't get his way with OpenAI." Savitt said Musk used his promises of funding to bully OpenAI founding members and tried to take control of OpenAI and merge it...
OAKLAND, Calif. - OpenAI CEO Sam Altman began testifying Tuesday in his feud with Elon Musk, taking the stand to defend himself at a trial that has featured disparaging commentary about his leadership at a pivotal time for the ChatGPT maker. ... Musk, the w...
OAKLAND, California, May 12 (Reuters) - OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman on Tuesday rejected Elon Musk's claim that he betrayed the ChatGPT maker's founding mission to serve the public good, at a trial that may determine the future of OpenAI and its leader...
OpenAI President Greg Brockman testified that Elon Musk "gave up" on the company now valued at more than $850 billion, describing a tense moment. OpenAI President Greg Brockman testified Tuesday that Elon Musk "gave up" on the company now valued at more tha...
Sam Altman testifies that Elon Musk wanted control of OpenAI Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, testified Tuesday that Elon Musk wanted complete control of the company and pushed for it to become a part of Tesla before leaving the startup he helped found. Altma...
After two weeks of testimony from witnesses who called Sam Altman a liar and a cheat, jurors in Elon Musk's blockbuster trial against the OpenAI CEO got to hear his side of the story. ... Altman took the witness stand in an Oakland, California, federal cour...
- Two claims survive the trial: breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment. The jury’s verdict is advisory only, with Judge Gonzalez Rogers making the final decision on both liability and remedies. - The liability phase runs through approximately May...
OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman on Tuesday rejected Elon Musk's claim that he betrayed the ChatGPT maker's founding mission to serve the public good, and said it was Musk who was interested in seizing control of OpenAI and making money from it.In an Aug...
Now, Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers has seated a nine-person jury on Monday afternoon and opening statements will begin tomorrow. The trial will be divided into two parts. The first part is the liability phase, meant to last until May 21, when it will be pass...