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OpenAI feels competitors breathing down its neck

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Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella expressed a common view in the tech industry when he said recently that large language models, the engines behind the generative AI boom, are becoming “more of a commodity”.

With a handful of leading model-builders vying for bragging rights with each new iteration of their AI, it is becoming hard to separate OpenAI’s latest GPT from Anthropic’s Claude or Google’s Gemini. 

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That makes it all the more notable that Nadella’s Microsoft has just lined up behind OpenAI’s latest funding round, boosting its valuation to $150bn. Will this moment be looked back on as the peak of generative AI mania?

Valuing any fast-growing tech company in a new market is notoriously difficult. But the extent to which generative AI has transformed the tech landscape and the speed of OpenAI’s emergence have left investors groping for yardsticks and historical comparisons.

First, consider what it has built. ChatGPT, launched nearly two years ago, became a hit consumer brand almost overnight and now claims 250mn users a week. The $20 monthly subscription fee paid by a small minority has lifted its annualised revenue to $3.6bn.

OpenAI could also be on the way to becoming a wider tech platform. Many other companies have integrated its AI into their own products and services. The tools it is building to make its technology more useful in the business world have given it a rare opening in the enterprise market.

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It is tempting to draw parallels with earlier hot start-ups, such as Google. When the search company’s stock market value first hit $150bn, in 2006, it was not the clear winner in search that it went on to become, with less than half the market. Its $10bn in revenue that year was similar to the $11bn OpenAI is reported to project for next year.

But it is here that the comparisons break down, and the scale of the challenge ahead for OpenAI becomes more apparent. Google was already churning out cash in 2006. OpenAI, without a functional business model, is on track to burn through more than $5bn of cash this year, with little prospect of stemming the flow in the short term.

Along with the sharply escalating expense of training ever-larger models, the considerable computing power needed to respond to users’ prompts will continue to weigh heavily on margins as it grows. Nor does it seem to be able to use pricing as a weapon. Although it has brought down prices rapidly to match greater efficiencies in responding to queries, the costs of querying for other LLMs that are available through the main cloud services have fallen pretty much in parallel.

That points to OpenAI’s biggest challenge: the lack of deep moats around its business, and the intense competition it faces.

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On the consumer side, Meta said last week that 500mn people are now looking at its Meta.AI at least once a month, a sign of the vast, captive markets available to OpenAI’s Big Tech rivals. Google and Meta also have ready-made advertising businesses, which have proved to be the best route to monetising large-scale digital audiences.

ChatGPT can point to a favoured position on the iPhone, thanks to a deal with Apple. But Apple is only making the chatbot available through its Siri assistant, and even then only for handling questions that are beyond the current capabilities of its own AI models — hardly a recipe for long-term success as OpenAI tries to cement its early consumer gains.

Competition on the enterprise side is also growing fast. Close ally Microsoft is diversifying away from its early reliance on OpenAI, while the capabilities of open source AI models have advanced rapidly, making them viable alternatives. Meta’s Llama hasn’t yet become “the Linux of AI”, as Mark Zuckerberg suggested last week, but the risk of commodification that Nadella warned about looms large.

At this point, it is worth remembering that generative AI is still in its infancy, and that the vast resources being poured into the technology could still hold big surprises and bring considerable unanticipated disruption.

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OpenAI’s latest models hint at the potential. Its voice-powered GPT-4o has been credited with breaking new ground in naturalistic voice interaction, potentially opening up new consumer markets to AI. And it claims its GPT-o1 is the first model capable of breaking a complex problem down and reasoning its way to a solution. That could point to a future where AI models themselves take on more of the work in a business application, sucking value out of traditional software as they become more central to working life.

It is impossible to tell how far capabilities like these will advance and whether OpenAI can maintain a meaningful edge in model-building. But with the most powerful companies in tech closing fast, investors backing the group at $150bn will need a strong stomach.

richard.waters@ft.com

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OPUL Jets partners with SpaceX’s Starlink Aviation

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OPUL Jets partners with SpaceX’s Starlink Aviation

Premier private jet charter provider OPUL Jets has announced a significant upgrade to its fleet through a new partnership with SpaceX’s Starlink Aviation. This strategic move will equip OPUL Jets’ compatible fleet with the latest in satellite internet technology

Continue reading OPUL Jets partners with SpaceX’s Starlink Aviation at Business Traveller.

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“Aircrafted by Emirates” launches limited-edition Neo collection

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“Aircrafted by Emirates” launches limited-edition Neo collection

This sustainable initiative follows Emirates’ successful “Aircrrafted by Emirates” up-cycled items collection. By repurposing materials, Emirates reduces waste and supports its partner, Team New Zealand, in their shared commitment to excellence and innovation.

Continue reading “Aircrafted by Emirates” launches limited-edition Neo collection at Business Traveller.

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Singapore’s former transport minister sentenced to one year in prison

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US stocks eked out slight gains, with Wall Street appearing in a generally cautious mood against the backdrop of rising tensions in the Middle East.

The S&P 500 closed less than 0.1 per cent higher on Wednesday, with the energy, technology and financial sectors emerging as the benchmark index’s best performers.

Investors bought energy stocks as the conflict in the Middle East continued to support the price of oil. Shares in industry leaders ExxonMobil and Chevron added 1.3 and 0.8 per cent, respectively.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, settled 0.5 per cent higher at $73.90 a barrel.

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The Nasdaq Composite added 0.1 per cent, with Apple and Nvidia the only members of the “Magnificent Seven” group of tech stocks to advance.

The yield on the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury note added almost 0.02 percentage points to 3.63 per cent.

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White House deploys troops in vast hurricane recovery effort

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Joe Biden ordered 1,000 soldiers to go to devastated regions across the Southeastern United States as Washington scrambled to deal with the deadly aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

The White House said on Wednesday it would deploy the troops to assist with ongoing delivery of food, water and other aid to stricken communities.

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The storm, which developed in the north-west Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, where scientists have recorded unusually warm sea temperatures, made landfall in Florida before sweeping through Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina over the weekend, killing more than 100 people and causing torrential rain and mudslides across inland mountainous regions.

Biden was expected to fly over western North Carolina, much of which remains difficult to reach by road, before travelling to Georgia and Florida on Thursday, according to the White House schedule. Vice-president and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris also headed to Georgia.

Kamala Harris comforts people as she visits an area impacted by Hurricane Helene in Augusta, Georgia
Vice-president Kamala Harris, in the middle of a presidential campaign against Republican former president Donald Trump, travelled to Georgia © AP

The troops will join 6,000 National Guard members and more than 4,800 federal workers spread across the multiple states affected by the hurricane, including 1,200 emergency workers in North Carolina. 

Secretary of Homeland Security, Alejandro Mayorkas, said earlier in the week that hundreds of homes and businesses had been destroyed and many areas were still in a search-and-rescue phase.

Rescue workers search for missing people in Burnsville, North Carolina
Search-and-rescue efforts continue across western North Carolina © Reuters

“We are there and we will continue to be there and we will reach the most difficult to access locations,” said Mayorkas.

The Department of Defense said on Wednesday that it had activated 22 helicopters and dozens of high-water vehicles to aid in the rescue efforts, while the Army Corps of Engineers was supporting with debris removal, wastewater management and bridge inspections.

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An all terrain vehicle approaches a section of destroyed road in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, in Barnardsville, North Carolina
Flash flooding and landslides in western North Carolina have isolated many people © Reuters

More than 1.3mn people across the south-eastern US states of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina were still without power as of Wednesday afternoon, according to the tracking site PowerOutage.us. The White House said this compared with a peak of 4.6mn people without power last Friday at the height of the storm.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) said that it had provided 50 Starlink satellite systems to bolster communications services after the internet and mobile network failed across the affected south-east regions.

Overturned car lies in mud near a flooded creek in Barnardsville, North Carolina
The storm inundated the western part of North Carolina with catastrophic flooding, © Reuters

Grassroots groups in western North Carolina were organising via social media to disperse food, water and petrol to rural communities which were isolated after mudslides and raging rivers destroyed roads across the region.

Helene is the eighth Atlantic hurricane of category four or five strength to make landfall in the US in the past eight years. The economic losses were estimated at up to $34bn by Moody’s this week, resulting from property damage and business disruption.

Scientists have found that warming sea temperatures are linked to more intense hurricanes. A preliminary study from the Lawrence Berkeley Lab in California found that climate change may have boosted the amount of rainfall over parts of Georgia and North Carolina by as much as 50 per cent.

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Housing shortage forcing dairy farmers off the land

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

Madeleine Speed’s report “Worker shortages pose risk to food supply, warns Arla” (September 24) highlights how dairy farmers are quitting the industry. Herdspeople need to live near their work, but rural homes are invariably occupied by retirees or become holiday homes. Affordable rural homes can be built on so-called “rural exception sites”, but local authorities often require housing needs surveys to prove a need. These surveys cost a lot of money and only go to families who already have a home! Local authorities refuse to recognise numbers on their housing waiting list as proving need.

Only three parishes in the whole of East Devon have had such a survey in the past two years, so it is not a surprise that affordable rural homes are not being built. There are over 5,000 families in East Devon who are desperate for a home, but our council refuses to recognise them as being in need. The problem is the Nimbys.

Robert Persey
Honiton, Devon, UK

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Uber to launch limited-edition safari experiences in South Africa

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Uber to launch limited-edition safari experiences in South Africa

Uber is launching a limited-time safari experience in Cape Town, South Africa, available from 4 October, 2024, to 25 January, 2025, as the latest experience in their ‘Go Anywhere’ series of travel products

Continue reading Uber to launch limited-edition safari experiences in South Africa at Business Traveller.

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