"As a new chatbot wows the world with its conversational
talents, a resurgent tech giant is poised to reap the benefits while doubling
down on a relationship with the start-up OpenAI.
When a chatbot called ChatGPT hit the internet late last
year, executives at a number of Silicon Valley companies worried they were
suddenly dealing with new artificial intelligence technology that could disrupt
their businesses.
But at Microsoft, it was a cause for celebration. For
several years, Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive, had been putting the
pieces in place for this moment.
In 2019, Microsoft invested $1 billion in OpenAI, the tiny
San Francisco company that designed ChatGPT. And in the years since, it has
quietly invested another $2 billion, according to two people familiar with the
investment who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak
with the media.
The $3 billion paid for the huge amounts of computing power
that OpenAI needed to build the chatbot. And it meant that Microsoft could
rapidly build and deploy new products based on the technology.
Microsoft is now poised to challenge Big Tech competitors
like Google, Amazon and Apple with a technological advantage the company has
not possessed for more than two decades. Microsoft is in talks to invest
another $10 billion in OpenAI as it seeks to push its technology even further,
according to a person familiar with the matter.
The potential $10 billion deal — which would mainly provide
OpenAI with even larger amounts of computing power — has not been finalized and
the funding amount could change. But the talks are indicative of the tech
giant’s determination to be on the leading edge of what has become the hottest
technology in the tech industry.
Mr. Nadella worked with A.I. technologies when he ran
Microsoft’s Bing search engine more than a decade ago, and for several years he
has convened a biweekly internal meeting of A.I. leaders.
“The expectation from Satya is that we’re pushing the
envelope in A.I., and we’re going to do that across our products,” Eric Boyd,
the executive responsible for Microsoft’s A.I. platform team, said in an
interview.
Microsoft’s new talks with OpenAI were reported earlier by
Semafor. Its additional $2 billion investment in the company was earlier
reported by The Information and Fortune.
ChatGPT answers questions, writes poetry and riffs on almost
any topic tossed its way. Based on earlier technologies called GPT-3 and
GPT-3.5, it is the most conspicuous example of technology called generative
artificial intelligence, the term for a system that can generate text, images,
sounds and other media in response to short prompts.
The Rise of OpenAI
The San Francisco company is one of the world’s most
ambitious artificial intelligence labs. Here’s a look at some recent
developments.
• ChatGPT:
The new cutting-edge chatbot is inspiring awe, fear, stunts and attempts to
circumvent its guardrails, our technology columnist writes.
• DALL-E 2:
The system lets you create digital images simply by describing what you want to
see. But for some, image generators are worrisome.
• GPT-3: With
mind-boggling fluency, the natural-language system can write, argue and code.
The implications for the future could be profound.
“It has already been a home run partly because Satya was
prescient enough to make the bet three years ago, and because all applications
will be generative in the future,” said Matt McIlwain, a managing partner at
Seattle’s Madrona Venture Group.
The new generative A.I. technologies could reinvent
everything from online search engines like Google to digital assistants like
Alexa and Siri. Microsoft sees these technologies as a way of expanding and
improving its already wide range of products for businesses, computer
programmers and consumers, while boosting revenues across its Azure cloud
computing services.
“It is just fascinating to see how these generative models
are capturing the imagination,” Mr. Nadella told developers in India last week,
adding, “I think it is a golden age.”
OpenAI is working on an even more powerful system called
GPT-4, which could be released as soon as this quarter, according to Mr.
McIlwain and four other people with knowledge of the effort. Microsoft declined
to comment on its future product plans.
Built using Microsoft’s huge network for computer data
centers, the new chatbot could be a system much like ChatGPT that solely
generates text. Or it could juggle images as well as text. Some venture
capitalists and Microsoft employees have already seen the service in action.
But OpenAI has not yet determined whether the new system will be released with
capabilities involving images.
OpenAI is led by Sam Altman, who became well known in
Silicon Valley as the head the start-up builder Y Combinator. Mr. Altman, 37,
and his co-founders created OpenAI in 2015 as a nonprofit. But he soon remade
the venture as a for-profit company that could more aggressively pursue
financing.
A year later, Microsoft invested $1 billion in the company
and committed to building the supercomputer technologies OpenAI’s enormous
models would demand while becoming its “preferred partner for commercializing”
its technologies. OpenAI later officially licensed its technologies to
Microsoft, allowing the company to directly add them to Microsoft products and
services.
With backing from Microsoft, OpenAI went on to build a
milestone technology called GPT-3. Known as a “large language model,” it could
generate text on its own, including tweets, blog posts, news articles and even
computer code.
Clunky to use, it was mostly a tool for businesses and
engineers. But a year later, OpenAI began work on DALL-E, which allowed anyone
to generate realistic images simply by describing what they want to see.
Microsoft incorporated GPT-3, DALL-E and similar technologies into its own
products.
GitHub, a popular online service for programmers owned by
Microsoft, began offering a programming tool called Copilot. As programmers
built smartphone apps and other software, Copilot suggested the next line of
code as they typed, much the way autocomplete tools suggest the next word as
you type texts or emails.
For many, it was a “jaw dropping moment” that showed what’s
possible, Mr. Boyd, of Microsoft, said.
Then, at the end of last year, OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT. More
than a million people tested the chatbot during its first few days online. It
answered trivia questions, explained ideas and generated everything from school
papers to pop song lyrics.
Microsoft last year began incorporating DALL-E image
creations into its Bing search engine, and is working with OpenAI on a new
version of the search engine that would include technology along the lines of
ChatGPT, according to The Information.
Google, Meta and other companies have spent years building
models similar to ChatGPT. The A.I. systems develop their skills by analyzing
enormous amounts of digital text, including books, Wikipedia articles, computer
programs and chat logs.
“Building these systems really requires a supercomputer —
and there are not many of them on the planet,” said Aiden Gomez, a former
Google researcher who founded Cohere, an start-up that has built technology
similar to ChatGPT.
In 2019, Mr. Altman told The New York Times that most of
Microsoft’s $1 billion investment came in the form of the computing power
OpenAI needs — and that Microsoft would eventually become the lab’s sole source
of computing power.
Microsoft and OpenAI have built a new kind of supercomputer
specifically for ChatGPT and other generative A.I. technologies. That means
Microsoft can readily offer these systems to its own customers.
Microsoft and OpenAI hope they can improve these systems by
training them on larger amounts of data and most experts agree their skills
will improve.
Right now, Microsoft acknowledges, they can “hallucinate”
answers by mixing fact and fiction.
Speaking in India last week, Mr. Nadella presented data that
indicated as much as 10 percent of all data could be A.I.-generated in just
three years, which could lead to as much as $7 billion in revenue for Azure,
Microsoft’s cloud computing product, said Gil Luria who researches Microsoft
for the investment bank D.A. Davidson.
These technologies still come with a long list of flaws and
question marks. They often produce toxic content, including misinformation,
hate speech and images that are biased against women and people of color.
Microsoft, Google, Meta and other companies have been
reluctant to release many of these technologies because of the potential damage
to their established brands. Five years ago, Microsoft quickly backtracked
after releasing a chatbot called Tay that generated racist, xenophobic and
otherwise filthy language.
Mike Volpi, a partner with the venture capital firm Index
Ventures, who was among the early investors in generative A.I., said the
Microsoft-OpenAI partnership is one of the many contenders hoping to control
where the technology is headed.
“There is an argument to be made that they all end up
smelling the same,” he said. “There is another argument that what OpenAI is
doing is truly special and that all the money goes to them.”"
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