THE ESSENCE
Sam Altman made it official early Monday morning: OpenAI is seeing other people.
Microsoft will remain the ChatGPT maker’s “primary” cloud partner, but OpenAI can now offer products on any cloud.
Microsoft shares quickly plummeted following the announcement, recovered and are now trading 0.37% in the red at the time of writing.
WHAT HAPPENED
The official reason for OpenAI and Microsoft’s seemingly friendly shift from monogamy to polyamory is the same justification that AI companies have been shouting to the rest of the world: get on board or you’ll be left behind.
In a joint statement from both companies, OpenAI and Microsoft explained that due to this inevitable and unavoidable “rapid pace of innovation,” they now consider it necessary to “evolve” their partnership to “selflessly benefit our customers and both companies.” This “amended agreement” aims to “simplify” their partnership while continuing to focus on the broader end goal of “delivering the benefits of AI broadly.” Both companies’ main prerogatives here are to “build and operate AI platforms at scale” while looking toward “new opportunities.”
Favorable preambles aside, this announcement feels like OpenAI and Microsoft are telling kids they’re getting divorced.
Microsoft will remain OpenAI’s “primary” cloud partner, and any updated models and products will be pushed to Azure first. If Microsoft doesn’t want them for some reason, you can choose to “do not support required capabilities.” Probably the most important line in this section is that OpenAI can now offer its products to customers “through any cloud provider.” Previously, they were tied to Microsoft as the exclusive host and licensee of intellectual property. Those days are gone, which means they’ll start splitting capacity between Azure, AWS, Oracle, CoreWeave, and more. If you thought OpenAI’s inference costs were high now… wait.
Microsoft will no longer have to pay a revenue share to OpenAI. According to TechCrunch figures, this represents around 20% of Bing and Azure OpenAI’s revenue, which could be a likely revenue stream of hundreds of millions per year from Microsoft just for OpenAI to buy its freedom. The real kicker is that OpenAI will continue to pay Microsoft “until 2030,” but is now “subject to a total cap,” which remains confidential, although rumors suggest 20%.
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The biggest red flags in this announcement were, as we’ve become accustomed to, the things that weren’t said: where does this leave Microsoft, where does OpenAI get the money to do this, and what happened to AGI?