Elon Musk spent months in a California courtroom trying to prove that Sam Altman stole a charity. He got nine jurors, weeks of testimony from some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley, and a front row seat to the most revealing airing of OpenAI's founding history ever put on public record. Then the jury came back in under two hours and told him he'd filed too late. Not that he was wrong. Not that Altman and Brockman acted properly. Just that whatever happened between them and Musk, the legal clock had already run out before he decided to do something about it. The question of whether OpenAI actually betrayed its founding mission, the question that made this case worth following in the first place never got answered.