US judge dismisses Musk's fraud claims in OpenAI case at his request, plans to proceed to trial

US judge dismisses Musk's fraud claims in OpenAI case at his request, plans to proceed to trial
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Summary A U.S. judge dismissed Elon Musk's fraud claims against OpenAI and Sam Altman, but breach of trust and unjust enrichment claims will proceed to trial starting next week.

(Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Friday dismissed Elon Musk's ​fraud claims in his lawsuit accusing OpenAI ‌and co-founder Sam Altman of betraying OpenAI's original mission, but plans to proceed to trial on Musk's ​breach of charitable trust and unjust ​enrichment claims.

The ruling was issued by U.S. ⁠District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, ​California.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin on Monday, ​and opening arguments are expected on Tuesday.

Musk had said dismissing his fraud and constructive fraud claims, which he ​proposed, would streamline the case and keep ​jurors focused on his goal of ensuring that OpenAI benefit ‌humanity ⁠rather than be a "wealth machine."

The case centers on Musk’s claim that OpenAI, Altman and Microsoft (MSFT.O), one of OpenAI's largest investors, conned him and ​the public ​by forming ⁠a for-profit entity in 2019, after he left OpenAI's board.

OpenAI is ​preparing for a potential initial public ​offering ⁠that could value it at $1 trillion, Reuters has reported.

Musk is seeking $150 billion in damages, according ⁠to ​a person involved in the ​case, with proceeds going to OpenAI’s charitable arm. 

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