OpenAI itself has been accused of building ChatGPT by inappropriately accessing content it didn't have the rights to.
OpenAI — the company behind ChatGPT and a big part of Stargate — is partnering with the U.S. National Laboratories. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly spoke with OpenAI's Chris LeHane, here are the highlights.
Elon Musk doesn’t miss an opportunity to take a dig at OpenAI — even when the news item in question is supposed to be favorable to President Trump. Just a few hours after yesterday’s White House presser on The Stargate Project wrapped up, Musk posted on X that “they don’t actually have the money.”
Such announcements aren’t without political risks, as OpenAI learned when Trump adviser Elon Musk criticized the deal on the social network he owns.
White House AI czar David Sacks says, “There’s substantial evidence that DeepSeek distilled knowledge from OpenAI models.”
ChatGPT creator OpenAI said on Tuesday said that Chinese firms are "constantly" trying to tap into U.S. rivals to improve Chinese artificial intelligence models.
The White House is expected to announce a multibillion-dollar investment in American artificial-intelligence infrastructure from a joint venture of OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle on Tuesday afternoon. The companies are committing $100 billion to the joint venture,
A closer look at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman after President Trump announces a multi-billion-dollar joint venture between Altman's company, SoftBank and Oracle, and why it's already drawing the ire of major Trump ally Elon Musk.
The White House broke its days-long silence about SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Friday, as questions swirled about whether Musk had rankled President Donald Trump when he publicly bashed Stargate, the Trump administration's first major tech initiative.
Tech titan David Sacks reveals the status of the country's tech race with China and why U.S. data centers are important on 'The Story.'
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, accompanied by President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference in the White House on1, 2025. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/) President Donald Trump might have too many tech CEOs in the kitchen,