Well this doesn't happen often. He's giving away patents developed for his car. I'm sure there are many, many pissed off stockholders in Tesla today that he's done this.
ATL Biz
ATL Biz
Elon Musk often wins because he plays like a guy who has nothing to lose.
The 42-year-old techpreneur and PayPal co-founder is simultaneously disrupting two entrenched industries — automobiles and space.
Musk, who has ambitions of colonizing Mars, is CEO of SpaceX, which has developed lower cost, recyclable rockets that can carry human and other cargo to space.
Equally ambitious is Tesla Motors (NASDAQ: TSLA), Musk’s proxy for keeping the planet from choking on hydrocarbons.
The Palo Alto, Calif.-based automaker has built an electron-fueled sedan that can outsprint a Porsche. Even more impressive, the Model S can go 265-mile on a single charge, giving it near gasoline-car range.
But, Musk realizes he cannot save our blue dot single-handedly — especially with a sticker price that tops $100,000.
To help incentivize the auto industry — including his competitors — to join his crusade, Musk is taking an unusual step for a publicly traded company.
He's giving away Tesla's intellectual property — open sourcing what must be hundreds, if not thousands, of patents that Tesla owns on its revolutionary battery and charging technologies.
Tesla will not initiate patent lawsuits against anyone who, in good faith, wants to use the company's technology, Musk wrote on his blog Thursday.
"Yesterday, there was a wall of Tesla patents in the lobby of our Palo Alto headquarters," Musk wrote. "That is no longer the case. They have been removed, in the spirit of the open source movement, for the advancement of electric vehicle technology."
That move, which didn’t sit well with investors who jettisoned the stock, is in the spirit of Tesla's focus on accelerating the advent of sustainable transport.