I sat down in the Musk v. Altman trial courtroom today, painfully aware that no one was going to ask Shivon Zilis the question on everyoneโs minds: Girl, what the fuck are you doing?
Zilis, who testified under oath that she is the mother of four of Muskโs children, wasโฆ whatโs the best way to characterize this? A Musk advisor? She denies she was a โchief of staffโ but says she worked for Muskโs โentire AI portfolio: Tesla, Neuralink, and OpenAIโ starting in 2017. The two met through OpenAI, and they had what she referred to as a โone offโ before becoming โfriends and colleagues.โ The โone off,โ she confirmed, was โromantic in nature.โ
Her job under Musk was โto go find bottlenecks and solve them,โ and she claims to have worked 80 to 100 hours a week doing that. โIt was just bananas,โ she said. Her first two children by Musk โ twins โ were born in 2021, while Zilis was serving on OpenAIโs board. She kept this a secret. She did not tell the board who the father was until Business Insider reported on court documents that listed Musk as the father.
โMy first call was to my dad,โ said Zilis, who testified that even her own family didnโt know the childrenโs paternity. โThe call right after that was to Sam Altman.โ Greg Brockman, OpenAIโs president, had testified he found out about Zillisโ children from news reports. When he talked to her about it, she claimed her relationship with Musk was โplatonicโ and that sheโd had kids via IVF. This was reassurance enough for Brockman, whoโd been friends with her since 2013. She remained on the board.
On the stand, Zilis spoke softly and quickly. She seemed mousy. A significant part of what made her testimony so bad for Musk was that she appeared to be the only person taking notes on what Brockman, Altman, Ilya Sutsekever, and Musk were discussing when the cofounders considered their options for creating a for-profit arm of OpenAI. She also was โaiding and facilitating communication between the principal parties.โ Those notes are the trialโs most important evidence โ more important, even, than Brockmanโs diary.
The goal of the direct testimony seemed to be to take the sting out of what Zilis and the plaintiffโs lawyers had to know was coming. So she told the court that her role also meant telling Altman when Musk was โin a good headspaceโ for a conversation โ perhaps inadvertently strengthening Brockmanโs testimony yesterday that at one point he feared Musk would physically attack him โwhile vehemently denying that she funneled information to Musk.
Look, she and Musk testified they lived together and have a romantic relationship and four kids. She was originally a plaintiff in the suit. She kept her childrenโs paternity secret from her own father. All of those things would be reason enough to doubt her testimony about thinking OpenAI betrayed its mission during the chaos when Altman was fired by the board. She claimed that Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said something to the effect of โwe are above them, we are below them, we are around themโ during that chaotic period as being โterrifying.โ (The quote was โWe are below them, above them, around them.โ)
But the notes are really what did Muskโs case in. Try as she might, Zilis couldnโt explain them away.
There were a lot of ideas batted around in 2017 and 2018. We saw a lot of Zilisโ emails from that period. Notably in one, an option was โswitch to for profit in next couple of weeks (woah fast!).โ Another email noted that a โcomplete non-negotiableโ for Altman, Brockman and Sutskever โis an ironclad agreement to not have Elon (or anyone) have absolutely [sic] control of AGI they create.โ In another she wrote to Musk money manager Jared Birchall, โThey say they will not move forward without a guarantee to switch away from him having control. You and I can argue thatโs stupid all we want but they are holding firm on it.โ
โIf he hung around E perhaps it would force him to think about humanity moreโ
Zilis also knew about Musk halting donations before OpenAI did. On August 20, 2017, she wrote, โFunding freeze: OpenAI is likely to realize this week that their $5M in Q3 is, albeit correctly, on hold. Unsure how this will impact negotiations but wanted to flag it since itโs likely to have a big psychological impact on them if they find out.โ Musk told Brockman and Sutskever over a week later, on September 1st, that heโd pulled funding.
There were other machinations:
- At one point, Musk seemed to have suggested that she, Sam Teller, and Birchall โ two of Muskโs closest fixers โ should all take seats on OpenAIโs board so that Musk would have control of the nonprofit. Zilis wrote to Teller that she didnโt share that with the OpenAI team.
- In November 2017, Musk was thinking of creating a โworld-class AI labโ inside Tesla. To that end, Musk offered Altman a board seat at Tesla.
- Zilis wrote an email to Musk saying that to save him time sheโd brainstormed some solutions for him. Three of them involved developing AGI at Tesla. One was making OpenAI a public benefit corporation subsidiary of Tesla. One was getting Altman as an โanchorโ for TeslaAI.
- My favorite of those solutions was: โFind a way to get Demis. Seriouslyโฆ. Demis really does fanboy hard and I donโt think heโs immoralโฆ just amoral. If he hung around E perhaps it would force him to think about humanity more.โ
- After hiring Andrej Karpathy, Musk asked for a list of top OpenAI people to poach.
We had already seen one of her text messages in the docket โ the one where Musk leaves the board and she asks him whether she should remain โclose and friendlyโ to continue funneling him information. In her direct testimony, she tried to put that in the context: โThey were going through this weird half-breakup,โ she said. But in the cross, we found out that she didnโt remember that in her deposition.
โYour long-lost memories have been recovered,โ said Sarah Eddy, the OpenAI attorney, in one of the trialโs funnier moments. Sure, Muskโs team objected and the objection was sustained, but we all heard it. In fact, it was one of several times Zilis seemed to have recovered memories she didnโt have at her deposition, memories that โ coincidentally Iโm sure โ happened to be good for Muskโs case.
To be fair, Zilis performed the best under cross examination of anyone weโve seen so far, but she doesnโt exactly come across as truthful. And there was even more reason to be skeptical of her when we discovered how she left the board, which โ according to her deposition โ happened โbecause I picked up a call from Sam and he said, โIโve heard Elon is starting a competitive ventureโ and I said, โWell if thatโs true, this is the time to resign.โโ
Her primary allegiance was and is to Musk
Mysteriously, she had forgotten that call between the deposition and today. But she did seem to know that Musk was moving on AI when she texted a friend, who was in her phone as โShahini Rubicon Fluffer.โ (Incredible name. Thomas Pynchon will be so jealous.) โHave to resign OpenAI board btw,โ she wrote. โEโs effort has become well-known.โ Her friend didnโt seem surprised by the revelation. Zilis went on: โWhen the father of your babies starts a competitive effort and will recruit out of OpenAI there is nothing to be done.โ
Zilis added that Musk โproactively apologized that he had pruned my friend network through this.โ
Hereโs what it added up to, as far as I am concerned: Her primary allegiance was and is to Musk. To believe she didnโt know about xAI, I would have to believe that despite their โ at the time โ three children and the time he spent with them every week, he never discussed it with her. I donโt believe that. Who would? Thereโs enough evidence in her meeting notes to suggest she routinely held back information from OpenAI on Muskโs behalf โ xAI would be no different. I also donโt believe that she didnโt give Musk information about the Microsoft deals she approved while sitting on OpenAIโs board.
Musk didnโt have a problem converting the whole of OpenAI to a for-profit or kneecapping the charity by recruiting its strongest researchers. He didnโt mind the idea of subsuming it into Tesla in any of a variety of ways. The thing he did mind was not being in control of it. Thatโs what I took away from Zilisโ texts and emails.
Brockman and the OpenAI board were incredibly naive to allow Zilis to continue working there after learning of her twinsโ paternity. But then, maybe no one expected someone so meek to be so devious. She was smart enough not to raise her voice or nitpick obvious questions during her cross-examination, so her bearing read as more trustworthy than anyone weโve seen yet. Itโs just that the overall takeaway from her written communications is that sheโs put Musk first in her life. Everyone else โ including, apparently, her own father โ comes second. So on the stand, you might as well assume sheโs saying what Musk wants to hear too.