While it did not officially support either side, the FTC offered legal analysis that could aid Musk at a Tuesday hearing in Oakland, California. Musk cofounded OpenAI and owns AI startup xAI.
A spokesperson for Microsoft declined to comment. A spokesperson for OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The FTC is separately looking into partnerships in AI, including between Microsoft and OpenAI, investigating potentially anticompetitive conduct at Microsoft and probing whether OpenAI violated consumer protection laws.
Musk alleges OpenAI violated antitrust law by making investors agree not to invest in rival artificial intelligence firms, and by sharing board members with Microsoft, which is also a defendant in the lawsuit.
OpenAI has said the board member claims are moot, because Microsoft board member Reid Hoffman, who was on OpenAI’s board, and Microsoft executive Deannah Templeton, who had an observer seat, are no longer affiliated with it.
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But even after they leave boards, directors could still have sensitive competitive information, the FTC said. Board members who only have observer status are not exempt from the law, the agency said in its brief. Musk also claims that OpenAI facilitated a group investor boycott against its rivals. Such claims are viable even when the organizer of the boycott is not a member, the FTC said.