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Estel Blay Carreras, the scientist who will lead an Arctic expedition simulating a mission to Mars

Estel Blay Carreras, 39, has dreamed of becoming an astronaut since childhood. More than half of girls who aspire to a career in science give up in adolescence, but that wasn’t the case for her. She turned a fantasy into a professional future. She studied aerospace science, earned a doctorate, and held several jobs. Today, Blay Carreras — who lives in a residential neighborhood of Spain’s Sitges with her family and two hamsters — greets us with a smile and wearing socks. She leads a seemingly conventional life, but in just over a year, she will be the next commander of a mission that will simulate an expedition to Mars on a remote Arctic island.

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© Lupe de la Vallina (EL PAÍS)

Estel Blay Carreras tries on her astronaut suit at home in Sitges.
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Musk grilled on AI profits at OpenAI trial as judge probes for-profit shift claims

Malay Mail

OAKLAND, May 1 — Elon Musk sparred with lawyers for a third day yesterday at his California trial against OpenAI, struggling to explain why his own for-profit AI empire differs from the one he is trying to take down.

“Few answers are going to be complete, especially when you cut me off all the time,” the visibly irritated multibillionaire said as he resumed his duel Thursday morning with the defense attorney for OpenAI.

Federal Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, who must decide whether OpenAI—the creator of ChatGPT—betrayed its original nonprofit mission, had to intervene several times to compel the world’s richest man to answer questions.

After the judge accused him of playing lawyer by complaining that opposing counsel’s questions were “leading,” the tech mogul conceded: “I am not a lawyer.”

“Well, technically I did take Law 101 in school,” he added, drawing laughter from the courtroom.

A benefactor to OpenAI’s co-founders—to whom he gave $38 million during the project’s early days from 2015 to 2017 -- Musk accuses CEO Sam Altman and his partner Greg Brockman of betraying the startup’s charitable mission by transforming it into a commercial company valued at more than $850 billion and poised to go public.

He is seeking to have OpenAI—which rivals Anthropic and Google at the top of the global AI race—return to nonprofit status, in a trial whose outcome could reshape the question of who controls AI innovation in the United States.

OpenAI’s attorney William Savitt sought to demonstrate that Musk is a mirror image of what he denounces: all of his companies—Tesla, Neuralink, X and his own AI firm xAI, recently absorbed into SpaceX—are for-profit, and the entrepreneur himself presents them as beneficial to humanity.

“There’s nothing wrong with having a for-profit organization,” Musk answered, repeating his mantra: “You just can’t steal a charity”—meaning OpenAI should simply have started as a normal company from the outset.

“The worst-case situation would be that AI kills us all, I suppose,” Musk declared with a smile, seizing an opening from his own attorney to invoke the climactic scenario from the film “Terminator.”

The judge had sought to bar such digressions, telling Musk’s attorney at the start of the hearing: “I think it’s ironic that your client, despite these risks, is creating a company that’s in the exact same space.”

Musk’s testimony concluded Thursday, his third day on the stand, although he could be called back before mid-May.

Altman, his former protégé turned adversary, was present for Thursday’s exchanges and left the courthouse shortly after Musk finished.

Altman’s testimony is expected next week or the week after. OpenAI President Brockman, another early co-founder, will precede him on the witness stand. A ruling on the merits is expected in mid-May. — AFP

 

 

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The personal pettiness of the Elon Musk v OpenAI trial

In theory, Musk and Altman’s court fight could pose key questions about AI safety – in reality, it’s motivated by money and personal grievance

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, US tech editor at the Guardian, writing to you from beneath a cherry blossom tree in Prospect Park in New York City. Spring has arrived!

Facing AI and a tough job market, gen Z turns to entrepreneurship: ‘I have to prove myself’

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© Photograph: Reuters

© Photograph: Reuters

© Photograph: Reuters

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‘This is a tech soap opera’: Musk’s legal fight against OpenAI begins with Jury selection

By: AFP
Elon Musk's courtroom showdown with Sam Altman got underway here Monday with the start of jury selection in a trial over the billionaire's accusation that his OpenAI co-founders betrayed a non-profit mission to build artificial intelligence for the good of humanity and not for the money. Read More
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Musk v Altman: Tech titans face off in court 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman are poised to face off in court Monday, as the yearslong feud between the two tech titans comes to a head at a trial over the ChatGPT maker’s corporate structure. Musk, who helped found OpenAI in 2015 before leaving and later launching his own AI company,...

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Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize winner in Economics: ‘The ideology of billionaires currently has a mind-boggling degree of selfishness’

Inequality today is worse than what the United States experienced during the Gilded Age at the end of the 19th century, says Joseph Stiglitz. “The wealthiest person in that era was Rockefeller. And his wealth really doesn’t compare to that of Elon Musk, Larry Ellison, Jeff Bezos, and some of the new billionaires,” explains the economist, who won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2001, in a phone interview. “Their political influence under Donald Trump is also unprecedented, with Musk being the clearest example.”

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© FABRICE COFFRINI (AFP / GETTY IMAGES) (EL PAÍS)

U.S. economist Joseph Stiglitz, in a picture taken in Geneva on March 16.
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US justice department steps in on behalf of xAI in Colorado regulation case

Move creates conflict between state and administration as Trump seeks federal framework over states handling issue

The US justice department said on Friday it had intervened in a lawsuit by Elon Musk’s xAI challenging a Colorado law aimed at regulating artificial intelligence systems.

In its intervention, the justice department said the law violated the 14th amendment’s equal protection guarantee by requiring companies to guard against unintended discriminatory effects while allowing some discrimination aimed at promoting diversity.

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© Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

© Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

© Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

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Number of billionaires globally could reach 4,000 in next five years

There are now 3,110 billionaires but analysis shows ‘deep structural acceleration’ in wealth creation around world

The number of billionaires in the world could reach nearly 4,000 by 2031, figures suggest, as the super-rich accumulate wealth at an accelerating rate.

There are now 3,110 billionaires globally, according to analysis by the estate agent Knight Frank. This is forecast to rise by 25% over the next five years, taking the total to 3,915.

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© Photograph: Chris Harris/Alamy

© Photograph: Chris Harris/Alamy

© Photograph: Chris Harris/Alamy

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SpaceX secures option to buy AI startup Cursor for $60bn or partner for $10bn

Cursor is aSilicon Valley startup using AI to automate coding as Elon Musk’s firm seeks foothold in the AI market

SpaceX said it has secured an option to either acquire code-generation startup Cursor for $60bn later this year, or pay $10bn for their new partnership, as it pushes deeper into the lucrative market for AI developer tools.

Along with OpenAI and Anthropic, Cursor is one of several Silicon Valley startups that has drawn waves of developers by using artificial intelligence to automate coding, a business where AI companies have found early commercial traction.

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© Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

© Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

© Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

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A room of one’s own on Wikipedia: The editors who have been doing justice to women on the internet for over a decade

Marisa González edits an entry on Wikipedia.

A group of editors meets every Tuesday — computer in hand — to correct a blind spot of digital knowledge: the absence and bias with which the history of women is told on Wikipedia, the platform co-founded 25 years ago by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger, in an internet age that today seems remote.

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© Santi Burgos (EL PAÍS)

Carmen Galdón, PhD in Social Sciences and founder of Cuarto Propio on Wikipedia.

© Santi Burgos (EL PAÍS)

Some of the collective: Carmen Galdón, Gema Mañogil, Mónica Fernández, Florencia Claes, Consuelo Fernández, Marisa González, Carmen Díez.

© Santi Burgos (EL PAÍS)

Cuarto Propio en Wikipedia includes other contributors online.

© Santi Burgos (EL PAÍS)

Mónica Fernández (left), a sociologist, and Florencia Claes, who holds a PhD in communication and is a professor at Rey Juan Carlos University.
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Elon Musk snubs Paris legal summons over alleged child abuse images on X

Billionaire owner elects not to attend voluntary interview as part of investigation by French cybercrime unit

Elon Musk did not appear on Monday for a voluntary interview with lawyers in Paris, who had summoned the American tech billionaire over an investigation into his social media platform X and AI chatbot Grok.

The prosecutors told AFP that they had “taken note of the absence of the first people summoned”, without mentioning Musk’s name. The billionaire called the French authorities involved “retards” weeks earlier in a French-language post on X.

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© Photograph: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images

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