Microsoft steps down from OpenAI board, Apple will not take observer seat

midian182

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What just happened? Microsoft has given up its observer seat on the OpenAI board, eight months after it took the spot following the ousting and quick return of CEO Sam Altman. It's also been reported that Apple will not be taking a similar position. The news comes as regulators further scrutinize the relationship between tech giants and AI startups.

Microsoft, which has invested $13 billion into OpenAI, took a non-voting observer role on the company's board in November after Sam Altman, who had been fired by the directors days earlier, returned under a new board.

The Redmond firm said in a letter to OpenAI that its withdrawal from the board would be "effective immediately." It added that it has seen "significant progress" over the last eight months, is confident in the company's direction, and no longer sees the seat as necessary.

"As you know, we accepted the non-voting board observer role at a time when OpenAI was in the process of rebuilding its board," Microsoft said in the letter. "This position provided insights into the board's activities without compromising its independence, and we appreciated the opportunity to serve as an observer during this period of change."

Microsoft's dealings with OpenAI have caught the attention of regulators on both sides of the Atlantic. The European Commission has warned Microsoft could face an antitrust investigation over its links to the ChatGPT maker, and the UK's competition regulator is also looking at the tie-up. EU antitrust regulators recently confirmed, however, that the partnership would not be subject to merger rules as Microsoft does not control OpenAI, but they will be seeking third-party views on the agreement's exclusivity clauses.

The US, meanwhile, is investigating whether Microsoft properly notified antitrust agencies about its deal with Inflection AI. It's also looking into Microsoft's alleged dominance of the AI market. Other tech giants, including Amazon and Google, are also under the FTC spotlight over their investments in generative AI startups.

Apple, which last month announced it was adding ChatGPT to its latest devices, will no longer be taking an observer role on the OpenAI board, something Cupertino was widely expected to do as part of its deal with the company.

As reported by Reuters, an OpenAI spokesperson said the firm will establish a new engagement approach by hosting regular stakeholder meetings with strategic partners such as Microsoft and Apple and investors such as Thrive Capital and Khosla Ventures.

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Perhaps regulatory oversight is not the reason that M$ is stepping away from the OpenAI board. As I see it, M$ is likely stepping away from the OpenAI board because it is realizing that after forcing AI down the throats of Bing/Windows/Office users, a significant number of M$ sheep are not adopting its new pet cash cow, and without that pet cash cow adoption, M$ is seeing AI as being far less profitable than they estimated.

In other words, Typical clueless market adoption of a perceived FAD by a corporation, with profit as its only justification for adopting the FAD / cash cow, fails once again.
 
Microsoft is building a competing product anyway, and it was inevitable. Also, despite Microsoft's monetary input to OpenAI, OpenAI could pull the plug on any collaboration whenever it likes without consequence.
 
Perhaps regulatory oversight is not the reason that M$ is stepping away from the OpenAI board. As I see it, M$ is likely stepping away from the OpenAI board because it is realizing that after forcing AI down the throats of Bing/Windows/Office users, a significant number of M$ sheep are not adopting its new pet cash cow, and without that pet cash cow adoption, M$ is seeing AI as being far less profitable than they estimated.

In other words, Typical clueless market adoption of a perceived FAD by a corporation, with profit as its only justification for adopting the FAD / cash cow, fails once again.
It's been estimated that when the bubble bursts pension funds and investors will be down by 150 billion, but it won't end until the Musk and Altman's of this world are in the slammer.
 
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