Review of Microsoft’s Investment in OpenAI by the EU

Review of Microsoft’s Investment in OpenAI by the EU

The European Union is investigating ⁢whether⁣ Microsoft’s investment in OpenAI amounts to a concealed merger amid efforts to regulate the rapidly advancing generative AI (genAI)​ sector.

The European⁢ Commission, serving as ​the‍ EU’s ⁢executive⁤ branch, said Tuesday it is starting a competition ⁣inquiry ‌into the markets of virtual worlds and genAI; the goal is to focus⁢ on the current level⁢ of competitiveness and the role law might ​play in shaping these fields.

“The European Commission ‍will carefully review all ⁤input received through⁣ the calls for contributions. Following that review, the Commission may ⁣organize ⁤a⁤ workshop in the ​second quarter of 2024 to bring together all different perspectives emerging from the contributions and continue‌ this reflection,” it said ‌in a statement.

The EU is calling for feedback from interested stakeholders and ⁢set a deadline for submissions of March 11.

Growing AI business

The commission noted that with more than⁤ $7.9 billion invested in AI in ‌the EU in 2023, raising⁤ the ‌value of the region’s “virtual worlds” market to $12 ⁤billion,‌ rapid growth is likely to influence business competition ⁤significantly.

“Virtual worlds and generative AI ‌are rapidly developing,” said Margrethe Vestager, ⁢EU Commission ‌executive vice president ‍in charge of competition policy. “It is fundamental that ⁤these new markets ⁣stay competitive, and that nothing⁣ stands in the ⁤way⁢ of businesses​ growing ‍and providing the best and most innovative ​products to consumers

Even so, the EU’s efforts might not affect genAI development, said‌ Gal Ringel, the⁣ CEO of⁤ Mine, a data privacy firm developing solutions for emerging AI‍ regulations.

“OpenAI has grown so ⁣large‍ and ‌influential over the ‍past year that even a ruling against the company now would only prove a⁢ temporary‌ roadblock, as the company would surely find ​ample investment if it needed to pursue that route,” he said.

OpenAI leadership turmoil

The inquiry follows a period of⁢ disruption at‍ OpenAI in late⁤ November⁣ when the ‍board ⁣unexpectedly decided to remove founder and CEO ⁣Sam Altman. In response, Microsoft, an investor⁤ in OpenAI, promptly announced it would employ Altman.

A few days later, Altman was back in ​place at OpenAI.

The​ turmoil comes ⁢as genAI platforms and ‍tools come under increasing regulatory scrutiny due to safety and monopoly concerns. In December, the UK’s Competition and ⁤Markets Authority‌ announced it ⁣is‍ gathering opinions to determine whether the collaboration between Microsoft and OpenAI should ⁣be‍ treated as ⁣an ⁤effective merger. That move could precede a ⁢full-scale investigation.

Various nations⁣ have ⁣moved⁢ to try and put guardrails around the fast-evolving technology. During the inaugural⁣ session of the AI safety summit last year, 28 countries ‍endorsed a pledge to collaborate on research ⁢in AI safety.

The United States is focusing on AI safety standards via an executive⁣ order signed by President​ Joseph R. Biden Jr. And⁢ China has enacted specific ⁢legislation…

2024-01-12 19:00:04
Article from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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