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Behold, the Elon Musk jackass trophy

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Why This Matters

This article highlights a humorous yet revealing moment in a high-stakes legal dispute involving Elon Musk and OpenAI, illustrating how personal interactions and workplace culture can become part of legal narratives. It underscores the importance of transparency and the human element in the tech industry's complex legal and ethical landscape, impacting both industry reputation and consumer trust.

Key Takeaways

is a reporter who writes about tech, money, and human behavior. She joined The Verge in 2014 as science editor. Previously, she was a reporter at Bloomberg.

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Yesterday, in Musk v. Altman, before the jurors came in, Sam Altman’s team passed up what looked — from a distance — like a little league trophy. It was not. Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers had the lawyers read the inscription aloud for the press: “Never stop being a jackass.” It’s a commemoration OpenAI employees bought for research scientist Josh Ackiam, who testified yesterday.

How exactly did this come up in a trial about nonprofit contract law? Allegedly, when Elon Musk was leaving OpenAI, he talked about wanting to race ahead of Google. Achiam, who worked on AI safety, asked if that was really such a good idea. Musk called him a jackass. Years later, Musk is portraying his lawsuit as an attempt to avoid AI causing serious harm — something that, Altman’s team suggests, wasn’t high on his list of concerns back then.

During his own direct testimony, Musk denied the incident took place, saying that he might have said something like, “Don’t be a jackass.”

YGR ruled that the jurors would not get to see the trophy unless Musk’s team gave OpenAI a reason to introduce it, so they only heard about it. But now you can see it for yourself.