| The "when applicable" is like the preamble to the Constitution. It may be useful for interpreting the rest of the Articles of Incorporation but does not itself have any legal value. After all, the AOI doesn't specify who determines "when applicable," or how "when applicable" is determined, or even when "when applicable" is determined. Without any of those, "when applicable" is a functionally meaningless phrase, intended to mollify unsavvy investors like Musk without constraining or binding the entity in any way. If so, OpenAI would have to argue that open sourcing their models wouldn't benefit the public, which... seems difficult. No, they don't have to do anything at all, since they get to decide when "when applicable" applies. And how. And to what... Or does "when applicable" mean something else? And if so, what? There aren't any other sentences around that indicate what else. And it's hard to argue that their models technically can't be open sourced, given other open source models. Exactly. That's the problem. There needs to be more to make "when applicable" mean something, and the lawyers drafting the agreement deliberately left that out because it's not intended to mean anything. |
That doesn’t seem aligned with their articles of incorporation at all. If “when applicable” is wide enough to drive a profit-maximising bus through, they’re not a not-for-profit. And in that case, why bother with the AOI?
The articles of incorporation aren’t a contract. I don’t know enough law to be able to guess how it’ll be interpreted in court, but intuitively Elon seems to have a point. If you want to take the AOI seriously, Sam Altman’s OpenAI doesn’t pass the pub test.