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Djokovic fights through tough Roland Garros opener, Zverev strolls
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Clark fires sizzling 60 to win PGA CJ Cup Byron Nelson title
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan and Juve left in limbo
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Antonelli wins Canadian Grand Prix to extend championship lead
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Mandalorian and Grogu blast to first place in weekend box office
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Second division Torreense stun giants Sporting in Portuguese cup final
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan and Juve miss out
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Djokovic comes from behind to keep Roland Garros bid alive
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Sweden's Rosenqvist wins closest-ever Indy 500
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Villarreal crush Atletico to claim third in La Liga
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan, Juve miss out
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Ready, set, dope: Enhanced Games to begin in Las Vegas
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Senegal parliament speaker steps down in political crisis
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'Be yourself' Guardiola tells Man City successor
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Rubio accuses Hezbollah of trying to 'drag Lebanon back into chaos'
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China launches crewed space flight as part of Moon ambitions
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'Sad' Nuno apologises to fans after West Ham relegation
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Juve's derby with Torino delayed after trouble leaves fan in hospital
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Arteta savours Arsenal's 'beautiful' trophy celebration
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Emotional Salah proud to put Liverpool 'back where it belongs'
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Arsenal lift Premier League trophy after beating Palace
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Spurs must invest to build 'top team': De Zerbi
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Spurs win to relegate West Ham as Guardiola, Salah say Premier League farewells
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Carrick says Man Utd's third-place finish 'something to build on'
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Ngidi leads Delhi to consolation IPL win over Kolkata
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Spurs 'showed up' to survive in Premier League: Palhinha
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St. Gallen win Swiss Cup
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Spurs survive as Guardiola, Salah say Premier League farewells
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Haaland crowned Premier League's top scorer
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Guardiola goodbye spoiled by Man City loss to Aston Villa
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Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning'
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Man Utd's Fernandes sets new outright Premier League assist record
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Trump tempers expectations of a Middle East deal with Iran
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Trump says US will not 'rush into a deal' with Iran, as criticism mounts
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Zverev strolls to opening Roland Garros win, Djokovic waits in wings
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Salah starts in final Liverpool game
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Norway's Dversnes takes surprise win in Giro 15th stage
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All-round Archer powers Rajasthan into IPL play-offs
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Iran and US closing in on deal to end war
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Kostyuk dedicates opening Roland Garros win to Ukraine
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Turkey riot police use tear gas to take opposition party HQ
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China to launch three-crew space flight as part of Moon ambitions
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Rescuers search for 20 missing after Philippine building collapse
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Yemen family deprived of aid reduced to eating tree leaves
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Possible Iran-US deal: What we know
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Will Barcelona's latest Champions League triumph mark the end of an era?
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Dread and denial at heart of deadly DR Congo Ebola outbreak
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India voices concern on US visas but sees alignment with Rubio
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China's Li Shifeng defends Malaysia Masters title
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Pakistan train blast kills at least 24 in Balochistan
Microsoft boss to testify on his role in OpenAI's founding
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is expected to take the stand Monday in Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI, to explain emails that revealed how his company funded the ChatGPT creator's shift from philanthropic organization to for-profit AI giant.
Nadella's testimony will precede that of OpenAI boss Sam Altman, whose questioning -- likely on Tuesday or Wednesday -- will be one of the final stages in a closely watched trial before a federal jury in Oakland, California.
The trial has laid bare the internal strife within a circle of elite Silicon Valley engineers, investors and executives in the years leading up to the high-profile launch of the ChatGPT chatbot in 2022.
In his lawsuit, Musk accuses OpenAI of betraying its original nonprofit mission and misappropriating his founding donations totalling $38 million to build an empire valued at over $850 billion.
The Tesla and SpaceX founder is calling for OpenAI to revert to its original status as a nonprofit -- a move that would impact its position in the global artificial intelligence race against Anthropic, Google and China's Deepseek.
OpenAI counters that Musk left voluntarily after failing to seize majority control and has since become the company's direct competitor through his own AI venture, xAI.
An "advisory" jury is expected to reach a verdict on any actual wrongdoing by the week of May 18.
Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers will then make the final ruling on both liability and remedies after hearing the jury's opinion. She has indicated she will likely follow their advice.
If Gonzalez Rogers ultimately sides with Musk, OpenAI's initial public offering could be jeopardized.
- Attracting investment -
On Monday, Musk's lawyers are expected to try to convince the jury that Microsoft, by investing in OpenAI in 2019, knew it was helping divert a nonprofit foundation from its original purpose.
He will rely on recently disclosed Microsoft emails from January 2018 to demonstrate that the tech giant only opened its checkbook once a profit appeared possible.
In the emails, Nadella consulted his executives about a discount granted to OpenAI to use the computing power of Azure, Microsoft's cloud-computing platform.
"Overall I can't tell what research they are doing and how if shared with us it could help us get ahead," Nadella wrote. "From what Elon is telling everyone... he feels Open AI is at verge of some big AGI (artificial general intelligence) breakthroughs."
Skepticism predominated at the time, with Microsoft Chief Technology Officer Kevin Scott fearing OpenAI might "storm off to Amazon in a huff."
In the months that followed, cash-strapped OpenAI established a for-profit subsidiary to attract investments, rather than relying solely on donations.
In 2019, a year and a half after turning its back on the startup, Microsoft finally invested $1 billion. It would ultimately inject $13 billion in total, a stake now valued at $228 billion -- 17 times the initial investment.
The trial has already heard gripping testimony.
Last week, co-founder Greg Brockman -- whose stake in OpenAI is valued at $30 billion -- came under fire about his 2017 diary entries including one in which he appeared keen on "making money for us."
Musk's lawyers seized on the entries to portray Brockman as a calculating opportunist.
Brockman also told lawyers that Musk physically threatened him in 2017 after Musk was refused absolute control of OpenAI.
Musk on Wednesday announced a major partnership with Anthropic, OpenAI's top rival, to allow it to use the compute capacity at SpaceX's largest data center.
D.Schneider--BTB