Musk clashes with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman over Trump-supported Stargate AI
data center project
Send a link to a friend
[January 23, 2025] By
MATT O'BRIEN
Elon Musk is clashing with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman over the Stargate
artificial intelligence infrastructure project touted by President
Donald Trump, the latest in a feud between the two tech billionaires
that started on OpenAI's board and is now testing Musk's influence with
the new president.
Trump on Tuesday had talked up a joint venture investing up to $500
billion through a new partnership formed by OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT,
alongside Oracle and SoftBank.
The new entity, Stargate, is already starting to build out data centers
and the electricity generation needed for the further development of
fast-evolving AI technology.
Trump declared it “a resounding declaration of confidence in America’s
potential” under his new administration, with an initial private
investment of $100 billion that could reach five times that sum.
But Musk, a close Trump adviser who helped bankroll his campaign and now
leads a government cost-cutting initiative, questioned the value of the
investment hours later.
“They don’t actually have the money,” Musk wrote on his social platform
X. “SoftBank has well under $10B secured. I have that on good
authority.”
Altman responded Wednesday to say Musk was “wrong, as you surely know”
and inviting Musk to come visit the first site in Texas that is already
under construction.
"(T)his is great for the country. i realize what is great for the
country isn’t always what’s optimal for your companies, but in your new
role i hope you’ll mostly put (America) first,” Altman wrote, using a
U.S. flag emoji to represent America.
Behind the feud
The public clash over Stargate is part of a years-long dispute between
Musk and Altman that began with a boardroom rivalry over who should run
OpenAI, which both men helped found.
Musk, an early OpenAI investor and board member, sued the artificial
intelligence company last year alleging it had betrayed its founding
aims as a nonprofit research lab benefiting the public good rather than
pursuing profits.
Musk has since escalated the dispute, adding new claims and asking for a
court order that would stop OpenAI’s plans to convert itself into a
for-profit business more fully. A hearing is set for February in a
California federal court.
The world’s richest man, whose companies include Tesla, SpaceX and X,
last year started his own rival AI company, xAI, that is building its
own big data center in Memphis, Tennessee. Musk says it faces unfair
competition from OpenAI and its close business partner Microsoft, which
has supplied the huge computing resources needed to build AI systems
such as ChatGPT.
When did Stargate start?
Tech news outlet The Information first reported on an OpenAI data center
project called Stargate in March 2024, indicating that it's been in the
works long before Trump announced it.
[to top of second column] |
Elon Musk arrives before the 60th Presidential Inauguration in the
Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
(Kevin Lamarque/Pool Photo via AP)
Another company — Crusoe Energy
Systems — announced in July it was building a large and “specially
designed AI data center” at the northwest edge of Abilene, Texas at
a site run by energy technology company Lancium. Crusoe and Lancium
said in a joint statement at the time that the project was
“supported by a multibillion-dollar investment” but didn't disclose
its backers.
AI technology requires huge amounts of electricity
to build and operate and both companies said the project would be
powered with renewable sources such as nearby solar farms, in a way
that Lancium CEO Michael McNamara said would “deliver the maximum
amount of green energy at the lowest possible cost.” Crusoe said it
would own and develop the facility.
It's not clear how and when that project became the first phase of
the Stargate investment revealed by Trump. Abilene Mayor Weldon Hurt
said construction began about nine months ago but “we didn’t know it
was going to be quite this big. We thought it was going to be about
a third of this size.”
Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison said Tuesday that the Abilene
project is the first of about 10 data center buildings currently
being built and that number could expand to 20.
Hurt told The Associated Press that the region surrounding Abilene,
a city of about 130,000 people, benefits from a wealth of energy
sources, including oil, gas, solar and some of the “largest wind
farms in the world,” though Trump signaled opposition to wind power
this week by temporarily halting approval of wind projects on
federal lands.
“We have the capability to produce the energy for this market so it
really means a lot for a town like Abilene,” Hurt said. “To have
this opportunity here in west-central Texas, to have something like
this to make Abilene substantial, we’re just excited about it.”
Where is Microsoft?
Missing from Trump's press conference Tuesday was Microsoft, which
has long supported OpenAI with billions of dollars in investments
and enabling its data centers to be used to build the models behind
ChatGPT and other generative AI tools.
Microsoft is also a technology partner in the Stargate project,
along with chipmakers Nvidia and Arm, but put out a statement noting
that its OpenAI partnership will “evolve” in a way that enables
OpenAI “to build additional capacity, primarily for research and
training of models.”
Asked about Musk's comments about the Stargate deal Wednesday during
a CNBC interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella pivoted to his company's own $80 billion
plan to build out its global AI infrastructure, of which $50 billion
is being spent in the U.S.
“Look, all I know is, I’m good for my $80 billion,” said Nadella,
laughing.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |