HomeNewsOpinionThe tech giants are eating the chatbot kings

The tech giants are eating the chatbot kings

Open-source AI firms are meanwhile offering a better alternative to Silicon Valley

April 02, 2024 / 16:09 IST
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Open-source AI isn’t lucrative, and the quality of such models is still behind that of OpenAI and Google — but they are catching up. (Source: Bloomberg)

When ChatGPT hit the market in November 2022, it sparked a battle for a new product category known as foundation models. These artificial intelligence systems, which generate text and images, cost tens of millions of dollars in computing power to build, and only a few companies have the resources and talent to create them.

In March, one of them was swallowed up by Microsoft Corp — and much more quickly than anyone expected. After raising more than $1.5 billion from investors, 70 staff from Inflection transferred to Microsoft, which is paying the company $650 million in licensing fees in a deal designed to make investors whole.

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Gavin Baker, a managing partner at investment firm Atreides Management, LP, tweeted that certain types of foundation models were now “the fastest depreciating assets in history.” He’s right. These capital-intensive businesses have technology so novel it can take years to figure out a viable business model. And they’re so expensive to build that future rounds of funding are likely to come from deep-pocketed investors in the Middle East. Other firms that have boldly built their own large language models, such as Anthropic, Character.ai, and Perplexity, may find themselves grappling with the same issues that beset Inflection. (ChatGPT is an exception to the rule, since most of its $1.6 billion revenue in 2023 came from subscriptions.)

The consequences of that are good for legacy tech firms, and not so good for society. Alphabet Inc’s Google, Amazon.com Inc, and Meta Platforms Inc are almost certainly eyeing these AI startups and looking for ways to swallow up their talent without raising the ire of antitrust regulators. Microsoft, through its unusual hiring and licensing deal with Inflection, gave them one playbook to follow. Another is investments-based partnerships: Last week, Amazon completed its $4 billion investment in Anthropic, which obliges the maker of the Claude chatbot to use Amazon’s data centers and chips.

The result of continued tie-ups like this will be an even more disconcerting concentration of power among tech giants, who continue to make major design decisions about AI behind closed doors.