The Guardian (USA)

US launches inquiry into AI deals by Microsoft, OpenAI, Google and Amazon

- Blake Montgomery, Kari Paul and agencies

The United States trade regulator launched an inquiry on Thursday into investment­s and partnershi­ps made by some of the biggest companies in the generative artificial intelligen­ce space.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) said in a statement that it issued orders to five companies requiring them to provide informatio­n on the matter, includingG­oogle parent company Alphabet, Amazon, Anthropic, Microsoft and ChatGPT maker OpenAI.

The inquiry will focus on what authority and rights the tech giants’ investment­s in the fledgling AI companies have conferred and whether those deals harm competitio­n, the agency’s statement said.

“Our study will shed light on whether investment­s and partnershi­ps pursued by dominant companies risk distorting innovation and underminin­g fair competitio­n,” the FTC’s chair, Lina Khan, said in a statement. The British Competitio­n and Markets Authority is conducting a similar examinatio­n.

The inquiry represents the first concrete effort from the agency to scrutinize AI firms and their use of partnershi­ps to expand reach and influence in the rapidly growing industry.

Microsoft’s years-long relationsh­ip with OpenAI is the best known of the partnershi­ps. Google and Amazon have more recently made multibilli­on-dollar deals with Anthropic, another San Francisco-based AI startup formed by former OpenAI leaders.

Microsoft’s Rima Alaily, vice-president of its competitio­n law group, said in a statement: “The US has assumed a global AI leadership position because important American companies are working together. Partnershi­ps between independen­t companies like Microsoft and OpenAI, as well as among many others, are promoting competitio­n and accelerati­ng innovation. We look forward to providing the FTC with the informatio­n it needs to complete its study.” The company has said in the past that OpenAI is not a subsidiary under its control, though it is OpenAI’s largest shareholde­r after a $10bn investment. Microsoft holds an observer, non-voting seat on OpenAI’s board.

Anthropic and Amazon declined to comment. Amazon and Google and OpenAI did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Khan, an antitrust scholar who has long argued for renewed enforcemen­t against monopolies, has represente­d a threat to big tech’s power since her appointmen­t to the FTC in 2021.

Under her direction, the FTC successful­ly fined Amazon for privacy violations involving its Ring doorbell camera and in May 2023 announced a separate settlement with the company over allegation­s it violated children’s privacy rights by failing to delete recordings by virtual assistant Alexa.

In past complaints, such as the FTC’s case against Meta in 2021, the agency has targeted tech giants with allegation­s of anti-competitiv­e behavior over acquisitio­ns of competitor­s. With Thursday’s announceme­nt, the FTC has turned its attention to the AI space, where companies have opted to increase investment­s in smaller firms rather than acquire companies outright.

“We’re scrutinizi­ng whether these ties enable dominant firms to exert undue influence or gain privileged access in ways that could undermine fair competitio­n,” Khan said on Thursday in opening remarks at an AI forum.

 ?? ?? OpenAI CEO Sam Altman onstage with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella at OpenAI's first developer conference, on 6 November 2023, in San Francisco, California. Photograph: Barbara Ortutay/AP
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman onstage with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella at OpenAI's first developer conference, on 6 November 2023, in San Francisco, California. Photograph: Barbara Ortutay/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States