"The tech giant aims to remain at the forefront of generative
artificial intelligence with its partnership with OpenAI.
Microsoft said on Monday that it is making a “multiyear,
multibillion-dollar” investment in OpenAI, the San Francisco artificial
intelligence lab behind the experimental online chatbot ChatGPT.
The companies did not disclose the specific financial terms
of the deal, but a person familiar with the matter said Microsoft will invest
$10 billion in OpenAI.
Microsoft had already invested more than $3 billion in
OpenAI, and the new deal is a clear indication of the importance of OpenAI’s
technology to the future of Microsoft and its competition with other big tech
companies like Google, Meta and Apple.
With Microsoft’s deep pockets and OpenAI’s cutting-edge
artificial intelligence, the companies hope to remain at the forefront of
generative artificial intelligence — technologies that can generate text,
images and other media in response to short prompts.
After its surprise release at the end of November, ChatGPT —
a chatbot that answers questions in clear, well-punctuated prose — became the
symbol of a new and more powerful wave of A.I.
The fruit of more than a decade of research inside companies
like OpenAI, Google and Meta, these technologies are poised to remake
everything from online search engines like Google Search and Microsoft Bing to
photo and graphics editors like Photoshop.
The deal follows Microsoft’s announcement last week that it
had begun laying off employees in part of an effort to cull 10,000 positions.
The changes, including severance, ending leases and what it called “changes to
our hardware portfolio” would cost $1.2 billion, it said.
Satya Nadella, the company’s chief executive, said last week
that the cuts would let the company refocus on priorities such as artificial
intelligence, which he called “the next major wave of computing.”
Mr. Nadella made clear in his company’s announcement on
Monday that the next phase of the partnership with OpenAI would focus on
bringing tools to the market, saying “developers and organizations across
industries will have access to the best AI infrastructure, models and tool
chain.”
OpenAI was created in 2015 by small group of entrepreneurs
and artificial intelligence researchers, including Sam Altman, head of the
start-up builder Y Combinator; Elon Musk, the billionaire chief executive of
the electric carmaker Tesla; and Ilya Sutskever, one of the most important researchers
of the past decade.
They founded the lab as a nonprofit organization. But after
Mr. Musk left the venture in 2018, Mr. Altman remade OpenAI as a for-profit
company so that it could raise the money needed for its research.
A year later, Microsoft invested a billion dollars in the
company; over the next few years, it quietly invested another $2 billion. These
funds paid for the enormous amounts of computing power needed to build the kind
of generative A.I. technologies OpenAI is known for.
OpenAI is also in talks to complete a deal in which it would
sell existing shares in a so-called tender offer. This could total $300
million, depending on how many employees agree to sell their stock, according
to two people with knowledge of the discussions, and would value the company at
around $29 billion.
In 2020, OpenAI built a milestone A.I. system called GPT-3
that could generate text on its own, including tweets, blog posts, news
articles and even computer code. Last year, it unveiled DALL-E, which lets
anyone generate photorealistic images simply by describing what they want to
see.
Based on the same technology as GPT-3, ChatGPT showed the
general public just how powerful this kind of technology could be. More than a
million people tested the chatbot during its first few days online, using it to
answer trivia questions, explain ideas and generate everything from poetry to
term papers.
Microsoft has already incorporated GPT-3, DALL-E and other
OpenAI technologies into its products.
Most notably, GitHub, a popular online service for
programmers owned by Microsoft, offers a tool called Copilot that can
automatically generate snippets of computer code.
Last week, it expanded availability of several OpenAI
services to customers of Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing offering, and said
that ChatGPT would be “coming soon.”
The company said that it planned to report its latest
quarterly results on Tuesday, and investors expect the difficult economy,
including declining personal computer sales and more cautious business
spending, to further hit revenues.
Microsoft has faced slowing growth since late summer, and
Wall Street analysts expect the new financial results to show its slowest
growth since 2016. But the business still produces substantial profits and
cash. It has continued to return money to investors through quarterly dividends
and a $60 billion share buyback program authorized by its board in 2021.
Both Microsoft and OpenAI say that their goals are even
higher than a better chatbot or programming assistant.
OpenAI’s stated mission was to build artificial general
intelligence, or A.G.I., a machine that can do anything the human brain can do.
When OpenAI announced its initial deal with Microsoft in
2019, Mr. Nadella described it as the kind of lofty goal that a company like
Microsoft should pursue, comparing A.G.I. to the company’s efforts to build a
quantum computer, a machine that would be exponentially faster than today’s
machines.
“Whether it’s our pursuit of quantum computing or it’s a
pursuit of A.G.I., I think you need these high-ambition North Stars,” he said.
That is not something that researchers necessarily know how
to build. But many believe that systems like ChatGPT are a path to this lofty
goal.
In the near term, these technologies are a way for Microsoft
to expand its business, bolster revenue and compete with the likes of Google
and Meta, which are also addressing A.I. advancements with a sense of urgency.
Sunda Pichai, the chief executive of Google’s parent company
Alphabet, recently declared a “code red,” upending plans and jump-starting A.I.
development.
Google intends to unveil more than 20 products and
demonstrate a version of its search engine with chatbot features this year,
according to a slide presentation reviewed by The New York Times and two people
with knowledge of the plans who were not authorized to discuss them.
But the new A.I. technologies come with a long list of
flaws. 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 they could damage their
established brands. Five years ago, Microsoft released a chatbot called Tay
that generated racist and xenophobic language and quickly removed it from the
internet after complaints from users."
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