Microsoft's big ChatGPT investment should have the competition shaking

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Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023

Microsoft's $10 billion investment in OpenAI puts Amazon, Google, and others on notice

Microsoft (MSFT) is pulling out all of the stops in an effort to ensure that it’s the dominant force in AI among its Big Tech peers. And the Redmond-based software giant’s $10 billion investment in ChatGPT developer OpenAI could be the key to doing just that.

The move, which Microsoft and OpenAI announced on Monday, will allow Microsoft to deploy GPT-3, the service that the generative AI chatbot ChatGPT is based on, and other platforms across its various cloud-based services. And that could spell trouble for rivals ranging from Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOG, GOOGL) to Salesforce (CRM).

“It tells you a lot that within a week of announcing pretty substantial layoffs, Microsoft is also announcing a substantial investment in OpenAI,” Gil Luria, technology strategist at D.A. Davidson, told Yahoo Finance. Microsoft laid off 10,000 employees last week across a host of departments.

FILE - In this Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2016, file photo, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella listens to a question at the annual Microsoft shareholders meeting in Bellevue, Wash. Nadella has written an autobiography recounting his efforts to transform the technology company with a focus on empathy and changing its workplace culture. The book, “Hit Refresh,” also reveals some personal challenges, such as his risky move to switch his green card to a temporary work visa in the 1990s so that his wife could join him in the United States. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is investing billions into AI technologies to put Microsoft ahead of rivals including Amazon, Google, and Salesforce. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

“It tells you that that's where they think a lot of the future growth for Microsoft can come from, and that the technology that OpenAI is developing can drive meaningful improvements to a broad set of products for them.”

Microsoft’s investments should help it build out AI-powered improvements to its Azure platform, offer better features for its various productivity and enterprise programs, and could even make its search engine Bing a worthy competitor to market leader Google.

But GPT-3 isn’t without its flaws, and Microsoft’s rivals aren’t simply waiting for the Windows maker to become an AI juggernaut. They’re making investments of their own in the hopes that they’ll cut off Microsoft.

OpenAI could could give Microsoft the edge over the competition

OpenAI gained popularity with the release of its DALL-E AI-powered image generating software in 2021. The company introduced a second version the last year. The platform generates images based on prompts you specify. For instance, typing in “A cat riding a dinosaur digital art,” will create an image of a cat riding a dino in the style of digital art. They're not perfect images, but they get the point across.

An image generated by DALL-E 2 using the prompt 'A picture of a cat riding a dinosaur digital art.' (Image: OpenAI)
An image generated by DALL-E 2 using the prompt 'A picture of a cat riding a dinosaur digital art.' (Image: OpenAI) · OpenAI

ChatGPT, meanwhile, is a generative AI chatbot that can spit out human-like answers to prompts. Ask it a question like how far away is the moon from Earth and it will tell you. Ask it to write a story about a maniac barber that eats human hair, and you’ll get an incredibly bizarre story about just that.

But OpenAI’s capabilities are about more than just cats and hair hungry stylists. Analysts say it could be a boon to Microsoft’s cloud, enterprise, and search businesses.