The Japan Times - AI startups swap independence for Big Tech's deep pockets

EUR -
AED 4.231245
AFN 73.725097
ALL 95.962768
AMD 434.735824
ANG 2.062095
AOA 1056.342299
ARS 1606.393999
AUD 1.626239
AWG 2.073519
AZN 1.957604
BAM 1.95412
BBD 2.323522
BDT 141.558314
BGN 1.969047
BHD 0.434928
BIF 3421.305633
BMD 1.151955
BND 1.473031
BOB 7.97187
BRL 5.995001
BSD 1.153668
BTN 106.985319
BWP 15.644465
BYN 3.516233
BYR 22578.31327
BZD 2.320215
CAD 1.578374
CDF 2614.937616
CHF 0.909578
CLF 0.026702
CLP 1054.361214
CNY 7.917443
CNH 7.932522
COP 4269.950704
CRC 538.818112
CUC 1.151955
CUP 30.526801
CVE 111.797223
CZK 24.444653
DJF 204.725614
DKK 7.472483
DOP 69.175247
DZD 152.537418
EGP 60.177999
ERN 17.279321
ETB 180.856753
FJD 2.548643
FKP 0.863331
GBP 0.863321
GEL 3.127603
GGP 0.863331
GHS 12.562006
GIP 0.863331
GMD 85.244374
GNF 10114.162901
GTQ 8.837288
GYD 241.357858
HKD 9.029004
HNL 30.607446
HRK 7.53747
HTG 151.189535
HUF 391.62372
IDR 19539.456616
ILS 3.571117
IMP 0.863331
INR 106.993323
IQD 1509.060734
IRR 1514820.507162
ISK 143.2575
JEP 0.863331
JMD 181.144285
JOD 0.81669
JPY 183.535768
KES 149.235866
KGS 100.738475
KHR 4619.338365
KMF 493.036529
KPW 1036.734401
KRW 1729.129827
KWD 0.353005
KYD 0.961307
KZT 556.522279
LAK 24709.429743
LBP 103157.548449
LKR 359.231198
LRD 211.211295
LSL 19.376215
LTL 3.401423
LVL 0.696806
LYD 7.349679
MAD 10.798136
MDL 20.113313
MGA 4803.651589
MKD 61.677112
MMK 2419.224151
MNT 4113.747641
MOP 9.313507
MRU 46.21601
MUR 53.577753
MVR 17.809319
MWK 1999.793406
MXN 20.387203
MYR 4.51048
MZN 73.611468
NAD 19.375558
NGN 1563.13347
NIO 42.300018
NOK 11.020803
NPR 171.170971
NZD 1.970788
OMR 0.442921
PAB 1.153663
PEN 3.948325
PGK 4.956574
PHP 68.866739
PKR 321.735508
PLN 4.267705
PYG 7456.072821
QAR 4.197681
RON 5.092557
RSD 117.454429
RUB 96.613944
RWF 1680.701993
SAR 4.325527
SBD 9.267752
SCR 16.230038
SDG 692.324942
SEK 10.747156
SGD 1.473891
SHP 0.864264
SLE 28.395712
SLL 24155.927782
SOS 658.342883
SRD 43.054339
STD 23843.137717
STN 24.767027
SVC 10.094191
SYP 127.389792
SZL 19.375564
THB 37.565572
TJS 11.034248
TMT 4.031842
TND 3.360832
TOP 2.77363
TRY 50.935521
TTD 7.820006
TWD 36.757731
TZS 2999.3791
UAH 50.735507
UGX 4340.193737
USD 1.151955
UYU 46.719839
UZS 14025.049287
VES 519.46575
VND 30307.9297
VUV 137.765566
WST 3.149103
XAF 655.348139
XAG 0.015
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.113216
XCG 2.079141
XDR 0.814294
XOF 652.58393
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.827596
ZAR 19.358311
ZMK 10368.954649
ZMW 22.559726
ZWL 370.928962
  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.83

    -0.53%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1800

    16.6

    -1.08%

  • NGG

    -3.0200

    87.4

    -3.46%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -1.3500

    52.06

    -2.59%

  • VOD

    -0.3800

    14.37

    -2.64%

  • BCE

    -0.2600

    25.75

    -1.01%

  • AZN

    -2.8700

    188.42

    -1.52%

  • RIO

    -2.0800

    87.72

    -2.37%

  • BTI

    -2.4600

    58.09

    -4.23%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.89

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.1370

    12.323

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    -1.0800

    71.84

    -1.5%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    33.86

    -1.27%

  • BP

    0.7600

    44.61

    +1.7%

AI startups swap independence for Big Tech's deep pockets
AI startups swap independence for Big Tech's deep pockets / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP/File

AI startups swap independence for Big Tech's deep pockets

It's the case of the vanishing startup: some of Silicon Valley's most promising names in the fast-developing generative AI space are being gobbled up by or tied to the hip of US tech giants.

Text size:

Short on funds, in the past few months promising companies like Inflection AI or Adept have seen founders and key executives quietly exit the stage to join the world's dominant tech companies through discrete transactions.

Critics believe these deals are acquisitions in all but name and have been especially designed by Microsoft or Amazon to avoid the attention of competition regulators, which the companies strenuously deny.

Meanwhile, firms like Character AI are reported to be struggling to raise the cash needed to remain independent, and some, like French startup Mistral, are thought to be especially vulnerable to being bought out by a tech giant.

Even ChatGPT's creator OpenAI is locked in a relationship with Microsoft, the world’s biggest company by market capitalization.

Microsoft helps guarantee OpenAI's future with $13 billion in investment in return for exclusive access to the startup's industry-leading models.

Amazon has its own deal with Anthropic, which makes its own high-performing models.

- 'Big money' -

Joining the revolution brought by the era-defining release of ChatGPT requires a supply of cash that only tech behemoths like Microsoft, Amazon or Google can afford.

"The ones with the big money define the rules and design the outcomes that play in their favor," said Sriram Sundararajan, a tech investor and adjunct faculty member at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University.

Breaking from typical Silicon Valley legend, generative AI won't be developed out of some founder's garage.

That type of artificial intelligence, which creates human-like content in just seconds, is a special breed of technology that requires colossal levels of computing from specialized servers.

"Startups have been founded by former research leaders at big tech companies, and they require the resources that only large cloud providers can make available," said Brendan Burke, AI analyst at Pitchbook, which tracks the venture capital world.

"They're not following the traditional entrepreneurial journey of doing more with less, they're really looking to recreate the conditions that they experienced working in a highly funded research lab."

Many of these founders, including those at Inflection or Adept, came from Google or OpenAI.

Mustafa Suleyman, the former boss of Inflection, was a leader at Google DeepMind -- and has now left his startup, with key employees in tow, to head up the consumer AI division at Microsoft.

Inflection still exists on paper but has been stripped of the very assets that gave it value.

Lining up with the big tech companies "makes a lot of sense," said Abdullah Snobar, executive director at DMZ, a startup incubator in Toronto. Their deep pockets help keep "the wheels greased and things moving forward."

- 'Sucking up all the juice' -

But aligning with established tech behemoths also risks "killing competition," potentially creating a situation where "these three big tech companies (are) sucking up all the juice" of creativity and innovation, he added.

The burning question in Silicon Valley is whether government regulators will do anything about it.

Big tech companies are increasingly in the spotlight for their appetite to eat up smaller firms.

Israeli cybersecurity company Wiz this week scrapped plans to sell to Google in what would have been the giant's biggest deal ever -- reportedly because the buyout would not have survived competition regulators.

For Inflection, antitrust regulators in the United States, European Union and Britain said they would look closely at its ties with Microsoft. Amazon's deal with Adept has raised questions with the Federal Trade Commission in Washington.

John Lopatka, professor of law at Penn State University, said "antitrust enforcers would have a difficult time blocking the arrangements" with Inflection and Adept.

However, that "does not mean they won't try."

US, European and UK regulators on Tuesday signed a joint statement insisting that they won't let big tech companies run roughshod over the nascent AI industry.

It's a sign that "regulation is catching up to AI," warned Sundararajan.

H.Nakamura--JT