2026-04-29
14 分钟Good morning.
Elon Musk takes Sam Altman to court in a deeply personal lawsuit.
NBC tells us what's at stake for the chat GPT creator.
Potentially, I think from opening eyes perspective, it would be a crippling of the company.
One of the top oil producers quits the powerful OPEC cartel in a shock to the industry.
The Wall Street Journal explains why it matters for the U.S.
And the British king goes to Congress.
As Oscar Wilde said.
We have really everything in common with America nowadays, except, of course, language.
It's Wednesday, April 29th.
I'm Cecilia Lay, and this is Apple News Today.
Two of the world's most powerful tech CEOs have taken their personal fallout
to court in a multi-million dollar trial that could transform the industry.
Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman and Greg Brockman,
the co-founders of OpenAI, the company that brought ChatGPT to the world.
Musk had been an early investor and co-founder of OpenAI, which was originally created as a non-profit back in 2015.
Their original idea was that artificial intelligence was too important to be left to a private corporation and that the incentives
would be all wrong if for-profit tech companies got their hands on the leading AI systems and that this was really something
that had to be developed in the public interest.
David Ingram is a tech reporter for NBC News and is covering the trial in Oakland, California, which began this week.