Elon Musk Loses His Landmark Lawsuit Against OpenAI
The verdict is in: after approximately two hours of deliberation, a unanimous nine-member jury ruled against Musk on all surviving claims — finding they were filed too late under the statute of limitations — and Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers immediately adopted the advisory verdict as her own final ruling. Musk has already announced on X that he’ll appeal, because of course he will. Two hours. That’s how long it took to dispatch the tech trial of the year. The jury apparently needed longer to find parking.
Here’s Why Elon Musk Lost His Suit Against OpenAI
MIT Tech Review breaks down the legal mechanics: the claims weren’t rejected on the merits — they were thrown out because Musk waited too long to file. That’s a legally clean win for OpenAI, but it also means the underlying questions about whether Altman and co. betrayed the nonprofit mission were never actually adjudicated. Whether that’s a feature or a bug for OpenAI’s PR team is left as an exercise for the reader.
Anthropic Has Acquired the Dev Tools Startup Used by OpenAI, Google, and Cloudflare
Anthropic has quietly acquired Stainless, a New York startup that automates the creation and maintenance of SDKs — the libraries developers use to connect to APIs. The delicious irony here: Stainless’s client list included OpenAI, Google, and Cloudflare. Anthropic just bought the plumbing its competitors depend on. That’s either a brilliant strategic move or the most polite form of corporate espionage I’ve seen in a while.
What to Expect From Google This Week
Google I/O kicks off tomorrow, and MIT Tech Review frames it bluntly: Google enters this developer conference as a clear third place in the foundation model race, a striking reversal from where it stood not long ago. The pressure is on Sundar Pichai’s team to show that Gemini has real legs and that Google’s AI ambitions are more than search-box window dressing. I’ll be watching closely — the gap between Google’s resources and its current AI standing is one of the more fascinating puzzles in tech right now.
Anduril and Meta’s Quest to Make Smart Glasses for Warfare
Anduril has shared new details about the AR military headset it’s co-developing with Meta, and the vision includes ordering drone strikes via eye-tracking and voice commands. So Meta’s Ray-Bans went from “hey, what’s that restaurant?” to “hey, neutralize that target” faster than most product roadmaps I’ve seen. The dual-use nature of consumer AI hardware is not a future problem — it is very much a now problem.
SandboxAQ Brings Its Drug Discovery Models to Claude
SandboxAQ is embedding its drug discovery AI into Claude, betting that the real bottleneck in computational biology isn’t better models — it’s accessibility. While competitors like Chai Discovery and Isomorphic Labs race to build the cleverest algorithms, SandboxAQ is going after the researchers who can’t navigate the tooling. It’s a genuinely interesting strategic bet: the picks-and-shovels play in a field full of gold miners.
Amazon Alexa Plus Can Now Create AI-Generated Podcasts
Amazon says Alexa Plus can now generate on-demand podcast episodes on “virtually any topic,” complete with AI hosts you can steer mid-conversation. On the one hand, personalized audio content is a genuinely compelling use case. On the other hand, we’re now one product launch away from a world where nobody ever has to encounter an opinion that wasn’t algorithmically tailored to confirm what they already believe. Progress!
OpenAI and Dell Partner to Bring Codex to Hybrid and On-Premise Enterprise Environments
OpenAI is teaming up with Dell to deploy its Codex coding agent in hybrid and on-premise enterprise setups — a direct play for the large organizations that won’t touch cloud-only AI due to data sovereignty or security requirements. This is the boring-but-important enterprise infrastructure story that doesn’t get the headlines of a model launch, but it’s how AI actually gets embedded into the companies that run the economy. Follow the enterprise contracts, not just the benchmarks.
Bottom Line
The week opened with a courtroom defeat for Musk, a quiet acquisition play by Anthropic, and Google about to take the stage tomorrow needing to prove it still belongs in the conversation — the AI industry’s power dynamics are shifting faster than any jury deliberation.