“The new
platform, launched amid market fears over AI’s disruption to software, is aimed
at helping businesses develop AI agents that work alongside humans.
The release
of Frontier is also aimed at helping OpenAI attract more businesses as it
competes with Anthropic, Google and other rivals for corporate customers.
OpenAI on Thursday announced
Frontier, a new artificial-intelligence platform that helps companies build,
deploy and oversee AI agents.
Frontier works with OpenAI’s
previously announced AI agent-building tools and makes it easier for businesses
to combine sources of data that agents need to perform tasks, the AI company
said. The agents will be able to process information from various sources and
complete tasks like working with files and running code, OpenAI said.
In a call with reporters, OpenAI CEO
of Applications Fidji Simo described the agents as “AI co-workers” that can
collaborate with humans and be used alongside agents developed by OpenAI
competitors like Anthropic and Microsoft.
“By the end
of the year, most digital work in leading enterprises will be directed by
people and executed by fleets of agents. This is already true for coding, and
it’s going to happen for many other areas, too,” Simo said.
The company
didn’t disclose how much it will charge users for Frontier, which is currently
available to a limited set of customers.
OpenAI’s
news comes after software stocks ranging from PayPal to Expedia and Intuit
plunged over 10% Tuesday afternoon—wiping over $300 billion off software and
data stocks. The response was largely because of investor fears that AI-driven
disruption will reduce the need for traditional software tools.
Both OpenAI
and Anthropic released new products earlier this week that helped spark the
software rout. Anthropic recently expanded the capabilities of its Cowork
assistant, powered by Claude, with new plug-ins that perform specialized business
functions, including one for the legal sector. OpenAI on Monday released a new
version of its coding tool Codex that operates in a way similar to the apps
that Anthropic is building into Claude.
In contrast,
OpenAI’s Simo said the release of Frontier is “excellent news for the software
sector” because it isn’t meant to replace existing software tools. Instead,
Frontier will serve as a way for companies to distribute their own AI agents,
she said.
“We’re not
going to build every single AI agent that companies need,” Simo said. “That’s
why we have built the platform in a way where all these software companies can
deploy their agents on top of us.”
Some of those players could include
OpenAI-backer Microsoft, Oracle and SAP—all of which offer their own specialized
AI agents designed to automate business processes. Those companies can have
their agents adopted through OpenAI’s Frontier, according to OpenAI, and serve
as sources of business data that custom-built agents need to run on.
For the OpenAI agents to work in
certain cases, they will need to pull in customer data from
customer-relationship-management systems like Salesforce, and content from
messaging apps like Slack, Simo said.
OpenAI has
also struck deals with companies like ServiceNow to directly integrate its AI
models into the business software maker’s AI agents.
The company
said some of Frontier’s initial customers include Intuit, State Farm, Thermo Fisher and Uber. Dozens of other
OpenAI clients are testing the product.
The release of Frontier is also
aimed at helping OpenAI attract more businesses as it competes with Anthropic,
Google and other rivals for corporate customers. By making Frontier a sort of
standard for building and managing AI agents, whether developed by OpenAI or
not, the company’s goal is to bring more business clients into its overall AI
ecosystem.
The San
Francisco-based AI lab is laying the groundwork for a public listing in the
fourth quarter of this year, The Wall Street Journal previously reported.”
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