The Manila Times

US FTC probes tech giants AI investment­s

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: A top US antitrust regulator on Thursday said it was probing investment­s made by Microsoft, Google and Amazon into generative artificial intelligen­ce (AI) startups OpenAI and Anthropic.

The move is part of efforts by authoritie­s to make sure regulatory oversight can keep up with developmen­ts in AI and stop major players shutting out competitor­s in a field promising upheaval in multiple sectors.

“Our study will shed light on whether investment­s and partnershi­ps pursued by dominant companies’ risk distorting innovation and underminin­g fair competitio­n,” said Lina Khan, head of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), in a statement.

One major concern is that generative AI, which allows for human-level content to be produced by software in just seconds, requires a massive amount of computing power, something that big tech companies are almost uniquely capable of delivering.

Amazon through its Amazon Web Services arm Microsoft and Google are the world’s biggest providers of cloud-based data centers which store and process data on a vast scale, in addition to being some of the world’s richest companies.

Microsoft has moved the fastest in the generative AI revolution with a reported $13-billion investment into OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT.

And after a boardroom fight that saw OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman temporaril­y sidelined, Microsoft now holds a nonvoting seat on the company’s board.

Anthropic, founded by former staff of OpenAI, received major investment­s from both Google and Amazon last year, and is seen as a potential major player in the fast-emerging generative AI sector.

Amazon had already announced it aimed to soup up its Alexa voice assistant with generative AI, which the firm said would allow users to have smoother conversati­ons with the device.

Anthropic also agreed to use Amazon’s chips to develop its next models, and the two firms said they would collaborat­e on developing a next generation of AI chips.

The startup also agreed to use Amazon’s cloud infrastruc­ture.

Such cooperatio­n is what the FTC will be taking a closer look at.

With regulators in Britain, the European Union “and now the FTC investigat­ing, the walls are quickly closing in on these socalled AI partnershi­ps better described as acquisitio­ns in all but name,” said Max von Thun, Europe director for Open Markets, an anti-monopoly activist group.

‘House of horrors’

FTC studies are intended to gain a “deeper understand­ing of market trends and business practices,” and any conclusion­s can guide the commission toward taking legal action, the regulator said.

In a statement, Microsoft Vice President Rima Alaily said it would provide the FTC with the informatio­n it requests.

“Partnershi­ps between independen­t companies like Microsoft and OpenAI, as well as among many others, are promoting competitio­n and accelerati­ng innovation,” she added.

Google said it hoped the FTC “will shine a bright light on companies that don’t offer the openness of Google Cloud or have a long history of locking-in customers — and who are bringing that same approach to AI services.”

This seemed to be a veiled swipe at Microsoft and its close partnershi­p with OpenAI that gives Microsoft exclusive access to OpenAI’s industryle­ading technology and profits until its investment is recouped.

Anthropic and Amazon declined to comment.

Khan, a former antitrust academic, has targeted big tech since taking office in 2021 but has yet to score any major victories.

This summer, for example, the FTC had to suspend its proceeding­s to block Microsoft’s acquisitio­n of Activision Blizzard, the video game giant, after a judge threw out the commission’s bid.

The FTC launched a major case against Amazon in September for allegedly making it harder for small businesses to compete on its platform.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, earlier this month started its own preliminar­y study of Microsoft’s multibilli­ondollar investment in OpenAI to see if it could be a disguised merger.

Britain’s competitio­n watchdog launched a similar case in December.

“Artificial intelligen­ce has the potential to become antitrust’s house of horrors if we do nothing,” said Benoit Coeure, chairman of the French Competitio­n Authority, in November.

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