The Distillation Dirty Laundry
In a stunning courtroom confession that shatters the AI industry’s carefully curated facade of propriety, Elon Musk admitted under oath that his company xAI used distillation techniques on OpenAI’s models to train Grok. The admission came during his lawsuit against OpenAI, where Musk is playing the aggrieved party claiming the company betrayed its nonprofit roots. The irony is thick enough to cut with a GPU: the same man who co-signed an open letter calling for an AI pause was caught red-handed using his competitor’s intellectual property to jumpstart his own chatbot.
OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google have been waging a moral panic about Chinese firms using distillation to create cheap knockoffs of their models. But Musk’s testimony proves what insiders have whispered for years: the frontier labs are all picking each other’s pockets. The Frontier Model Forum’s anti-distillation initiatives now look less like national security measures and more like a cartel trying to protect their compute moats from anyone who isn’t us. There is no CVE for this, because it is not a security vulnerability; it is a business model.
The Hypocrisy Hierarchy
Musk’s testimony also revealed a hilariously candid ranking of the AI pecking order. He placed Anthropic first, followed by OpenAI, Google, and Chinese open source models. His own xAI was a distant fifth with only a few hundred employees. This from the man who last summer boasted that xAI would soon be “far beyond” everyone except Google. The gap between Musk’s public bravado and his sworn testimony is a chasm large enough to swallow Grok’s entire user base.
The revelation that xAI needed to distill from OpenAI to build Grok is a devastating indictment of Musk’s AI ambitions. For all the billions poured into xAI, for all the hype about building the maximally truth-seeking AI, the company still had to crib from the very organization Musk is suing. It is the AI equivalent of a startup suing McDonald’s for being unhealthy while eating a Big Mac in the parking lot. The takeaway is clear: distillation is not just a Chinese problem; it is the entire industry’s dirty little secret.
Source: Techcrunch
