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Microsoft declined to invest in OpenAI in 2018, and later became its competitor

In 2018, Microsoft was skeptical about OpenAI's prospects and was in no rush to invest. But over the next eight years, everything changed: the cloud giant becam

Microsoft declined to invest in OpenAI in 2018, and later became its competitor
Source: 3DNews AI. Collage: Hamidun News.
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The dynamics of relations between Microsoft and OpenAI have changed dramatically over eight years. In 2018, the cloud giant was a true skeptic about the prospects of the young startup and was in no rush to allocate investments that now seem obviously profitable.

Microsoft's Skepticism in 2018

Microsoft in 2018 did not believe in the economic viability of OpenAI. The software giant viewed the startup as an interesting research project, but without clear business potential. The company approached investments cautiously — it seemed that investments in a young lab focused on long-term research without clear commercial prospects would be too risky. Other major technology companies were also skeptical about the potential of large language models at that time. The industry as a whole was confident that practical applications of LLMs would remain a distant future for decades to come.

The Turning Point After ChatGPT

Everything changed dramatically after the presentation of ChatGPT in November 2022. Microsoft realized the revolutionary potential of large language models, and its strategy changed within months. The cloud giant not only became OpenAI's strategic partner through Azure, but also began allocating billions of dollars for the company's development. Now Microsoft is actively integrating GPT models into Copilot, Office, Bing and other key products, attempting to capture the growing AI applications market. Investments in OpenAI turned out to be among the most successful in the history of the software industry.

The Paradox of Competition Within Partnership

Current relations between the companies have become noticeably more complex. Microsoft remains the main investor and cloud partner of OpenAI, but at the same time becomes its competitor on several fronts:

  • Develops its own AI models and competes in the large language model segment
  • Offers alternative AI services through Azure and Copilot Pro
  • Tries to reduce technological dependence on OpenAI solutions
  • Uses GPT in commercial products, but actively seeks other sources of models

Such dynamics are characteristic of the high-tech market, where partnership and competition often go hand in hand.

What This Means

The history of Microsoft and OpenAI relations shows how quickly calculations in the AI industry change. What looked economically unpromising in 2018 became the basis of enormous value by 2024. The main question now is whether Microsoft will be able to maintain control over the AI market, or if OpenAI will become its main rival.

ZK
Hamidun News
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