Ed Zitron (15:18)
by how much Anthropic's revenue increase in a matter of months. They literally went from 9 billion to $30 billion. ARR. I believe that took them a couple of months and now they're ahead of OpenAI. OpenAI's at 25. I mean, how much can we even trust these numbers? I'm not entirely sure. It's all self reported and I just can't wait until these companies go public and we actually know the numbers. I think it's going to be a very big deal. But yeah, I mean, the acceleration, the speed with which anthropic is scaled and the amount of businesses that are turning to anthropic, it is really unbelievable. I just want to turn to the lawsuit for a moment. I just, I think I directionally agree with you, but I think there are, there are a couple of sort of interesting nuances here. I mean, so the reason that this is happening is Elon says, who co founded OpenAI for those that don't remember. He says that this was supposed to be a nonprofit and that's why he co founded this company. And that's why he donated $40 million to this company in its early beginnings, or not. Company, nonprofit organization. And then they did this sort of ridiculous switch where they suddenly decided, actually, no, now we're a for profit company. Now we're an actual enterprise. And he's saying that's ridiculous. Which by the way, all of that is true. That is exactly what happened with OpenAI. It was supposed to be a nonprofit and now suddenly it's a trillion dollar for profit company. So Elon is suing them for this reason. But is that really the reason? No, the real reason is that he is now competing with OpenAI via his company XAI, which of course he folded into SpaceX. So he wants to figure out a way to basically kneecap OpenAI and Sam Altman. So he's launching this lawsuit. Now there are two main claims, legal claims that he is making in this lawsuit. The first legal claim is this thing called breach of charitable trust. And this is basically just the idea that this was supposed to be. There was a break of promise by Sam Altman. This was supposed to be a nonprofit. They turn it to a for profit, which means that the entire organization is illegitimate, it cannot hold. And he's pursuing this. And the remedy for that could be that they break up the company entirely or that there is huge, huge damages there. But the legal standing for that case is honestly pretty weak because actually it's the Attorney General's job to assess whether nonprofit donations were used correctly or misused. He's suing as a donor. I mean, his argument is that the entire organization is completely invalid and the legal standing there isn't very strong. The other claim, which he has stated he's not actually that interested in is a fraud claim. And that claim is actually a lot stronger. And basically the claim would be Elon was lied to about where his money was going and what his money would be used for, and therefore he should get his money back. And that's very fair because he donated $40 million into this thing. Now it's not really being used for what he expected on a personal basis. And so maybe he should get his money back. And that's a pretty valid claim. And if he does that and he wins that, then he'll get $40 million back plus interest. Problem solved. Except no, because Elon doesn't really give a shit about $40 million, and nor does OpenAI. And so I think that distinction really gets to the heart of this case here, which is Elon is intentionally choosing the kind of ridiculous route which could potentially gut the entire company, but probably won't work out, as opposed to taking the normal route where he says, you guys defrauded me personally. But he's not doing that because he knows that it's not going to kill the company. And that is ultimately his goal here. It's not actually about achieving justice. It's about trying to hamper OpenAI as much as possible, trying to make sure that they have to pay as much money as possible, such that they are behind in the race and they ultimately lose to Xai. So my prediction here is that he'll win, but only on the fraud basis, and they'll say, okay, you can have your $40 million back, and then he's going to complain and say it was a hoax, it was a conspiracy, they should be paying me billions and billions of dollars, and instead he just gets back the amount of money that he put in. So a little bit of nuance there, but I think that that's directionally where we're headed here. This isn't really about justice. It's more about how do I literally destroy Sam Altman's career.