In a dramatic new twist to the ongoing saga surrounding OpenAI, fresh revelations from co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever’s deposition have shed light on the deep divisions, secret merger discussions, and leadership tensions that rocked the world’s most influential artificial intelligence company.
The disclosures—made public as part of court filings in a lawsuit involving Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman—reveal how internal mistrust and governance disputes nearly upended the company during one of its most pivotal years. What was once considered a unified AI research lab “dedicated to ensuring artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity” has now been exposed as a battleground of clashing egos, competing visions, and corporate intrigue.
The Fallout of Altman’s Ouster
According to the testimony, the seeds of conflict were sown long before November 2023, when OpenAI’s board stunned the tech industry by abruptly firing CEO Sam Altman—only to reinstate him days later following an employee revolt and public pressure.
Sutskever, who played a central role in that decision, stated under oath that he and other board members had lost trust in Altman’s leadership, citing “a consistent pattern of lying, undermining his executives, and pitting his teams against one another.” He described an atmosphere of manipulation and fear within OpenAI’s upper ranks, where key figures felt that Altman prioritized growth and influence over the organization’s ethical mission.
“I reached a point where I believed that his termination was the only way forward,” Sutskever told investigators.
Talks of a Merger With Anthropic
Perhaps the most surprising revelation from the deposition was that, following Altman’s firing, OpenAI’s board held preliminary discussions with rival AI firm Anthropic about a possible merger or leadership transition.
Anthropic, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers Dario and Daniela Amodei, has long positioned itself as a more safety-conscious alternative to OpenAI. Sutskever confirmed that during the chaotic days after Altman’s removal, some board members floated the idea of merging the two companies and even considered appointing Dario Amodei as CEO of a unified entity.
While the talks never progressed beyond early conversation, they underscore just how fractured OpenAI had become—and how close it came to a corporate realignment that could have reshaped the global AI landscape.
Musk’s Lawsuit and the Ethics Question
The deposition forms part of Elon Musk’s ongoing lawsuit against OpenAI and Altman, in which the Tesla and SpaceX chief accuses his former collaborators of abandoning OpenAI’s nonprofit roots in favor of commercial interests tied to Microsoft.
Musk claims that OpenAI’s leadership has turned the company into a “closed, profit-driven entity” contrary to its founding mission of transparency and public benefit. The internal testimony from Sutskever adds weight to that argument, revealing how business ambitions, partnerships, and power struggles began to overshadow the organization’s stated ethical goals.
OpenAI has denied wrongdoing, maintaining that its structure—a hybrid nonprofit governing a capped-profit subsidiary—is designed to ensure both safety and sustainable funding for long-term AI research.
A Divided Vision for Artificial Intelligence
The internal rift reflects a broader philosophical divide now gripping the AI world. One camp, represented by Altman and his commercial allies, argues that large-scale funding and rapid deployment are essential to maintain leadership in the global AI race—especially against competitors like Google DeepMind and Anthropic.
The other camp, led by figures such as Sutskever and the Amodeis, warns that unchecked development risks catastrophic outcomes if ethical guardrails and governance frameworks fail to keep pace with innovation.
In his testimony, Sutskever admitted to being torn between loyalty to OpenAI’s mission and disillusionment with its direction. “We were building something extraordinary,” he said, “but the values guiding it were shifting faster than we realized.”
The Aftermath and What Lies Ahead
Since the turmoil, OpenAI has continued to expand aggressively—launching new versions of ChatGPT, partnering with Apple, and strengthening its strategic alliance with Microsoft. Sutskever, meanwhile, has stepped away from day-to-day operations, focusing on new research initiatives amid reports of personal burnout and disillusionment.
Industry observers say the deposition underscores a troubling reality: even the pioneers of artificial intelligence are struggling to manage the power they’ve unleashed. The OpenAI-Anthropic episode serves as a cautionary tale about the human fragility behind superhuman technology.
As governments worldwide debate AI safety and regulation, the internal conflicts of OpenAI offer a rare glimpse into the ethical and structural challenges facing companies at the frontier of machine intelligence.
The deposition may have exposed fractures within OpenAI—but it also raises a more profound question for the entire tech world: If the leaders of AI cannot agree on how to control it, who will?