t v o p retuiteado

Elon Musk is on the witness stand in Oakland right now telling a jury how Sam Altman stole a charity.
Not a company. Not a venture. A charity.
The founding documents are entered into evidence.
It started with a conversation.
Google co-founder Larry Page called Musk a “speciesist” for favoring humanity over computers. At his own birthday party. In front of a crowd.
One of the most powerful technologists on the planet told the man beside him that caring more about human survival than machines was a character flaw.
Musk walked away from that conversation and asked one question.
What is the exact opposite of Google?
Musk: “It would be an open-source non-profit. And that is where the word ‘open’ in OpenAI comes from.”
He funded it. Named it. Recruited the researchers. Brought in Ilya Sutskever. Personally brokered the original Microsoft Azure deal with Satya Nadella.
Musk: “I came up with the idea, the name, recruited the key people, taught them everything I know, provided all the initial funding.”
$38 million of his own money. Into a structure designed to prevent any single person from profiting off the most dangerous technology ever built.
The founding charter is now sitting in front of a federal jury.
It says OpenAI was created to build “open source technology for the public benefit” and was “not organized for the private gain of any person.”
Then they offered Musk shares.
He turned them down.
Musk: “Non-profits are not supposed to have shares. It did not seem morally or legally defensible.”
The man who built it refused the money because the mission was never supposed to make anyone rich.
Then something changed.
Sam Altman took that structure and converted it into a for-profit subsidiary. Attracted a $10 billion Microsoft investment.
And built what is now approaching a trillion-dollar company on top of $38 million in charitable donations.
When Musk found out about the Microsoft deal, he texted Altman directly.
Musk: “I said, ‘What the hell is going on?’ I think I said, ‘This is a bait and switch.’”
The media frames this as a billionaire grudge match. Two egos fighting over territory.
That framing is a lie designed to make you look away from the documents.
This is not a dispute over equity. Musk is not asking for money back.
He is asking the court to return every dollar to the nonprofit foundation. $130 billion in damages. Altman and Brockman removed from their positions.
The entire for-profit conversion unwound.
He wants the charity restored because it was never supposed to be anything else.
Then from the stand, one line.
Musk: “I was a fool. I gave them free funding to create a startup.”
$38 million donated to protect the species. Turned into an $800 billion vehicle for private enrichment.
The most sophisticated theft of charitable intent in American corporate history.
And if this conversion stands, it sets the precedent for every nonprofit that comes after it. Every donor who writes a check believing a charter means something.
Every mission statement drafted to protect the public instead of enrich the founders.
If you can collect tax-exempt donations, build the most valuable technology on Earth, and hand the returns to private shareholders, then the nonprofit structure is not a safeguard.
It is a startup incubator for anyone willing to rewrite the paperwork.
And the question no one in that courtroom is asking.
If the people handed the tools to protect humanity used them to enrich themselves instead, what does that tell you about what happens when the technology actually arrives?
The charter said for the benefit of all.
The cap table says for the benefit of Sam Altman.
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