-
'Timid' Keys makes shaky start to Australian Open title defence
-
Indiana crowned college champions to complete fairytale season
-
South Koreans go cuckoo for 'Dubai-style' cookies
-
Harris leads Pistons past Celtics in thriller; Thunder bounce back
-
Tjen first Indonesian to win at Australian Open in 28 years
-
Long-delayed decision due on Chinese mega-embassy in London
-
Djokovic jokes that he wants slice of Alcaraz's winnings
-
Trump tariff threat 'poison' for Germany's fragile recovery
-
Tourists hit record in Japan, despite plunge from China
-
Jittery Keys opens Melbourne defence as Sinner begins hat-trick quest
-
The impact of Trump's foreign aid cuts, one year on
-
Belgian court weighs trial for ex-diplomat over Lumumba killing
-
Inside China's buzzing AI scene year after DeepSeek shock
-
Asian markets sink, silver hits record as Greenland fears mount
-
Shark bites surfer in Australian state's fourth attack in 48 hours
-
North Korea's Kim sacks vice premier, rails against 'incompetence'
-
Spain mourns as train crash toll rises to 40
-
'Very nervous' Keys makes shaky start to Australian Open title defence
-
Vietnam leader promises graft fight as he eyes China-style powers
-
Dad-to-be Ruud ready to walk away from Australian Open
-
North Korea's Kim sacks senior official, slams 'incompetence'
-
Farewells, fresh faces at Men's Fashion Week in Paris
-
'I do not want to reconcile with my family' says Brooklyn Peltz Beckham
-
EU leaders take stage in Davos as Trump rocks global order
-
Blast at Chinese restaurant in Kabul kills 7
-
Warner hits 'Sinners' and 'One Battle' tipped for Oscar nominations
-
Colombian paramilitary-turned-peace-envoy sentenced over atrocities
-
Gilgeous-Alexander leads Thunder in rout of Cavaliers
-
Seahawks blow as Charbonnet ruled out for rest of season
-
Kostoulas stunner rescues Brighton draw after penalty row
-
Man Utd greats tell Martinez to 'grow up' as feud rumbles on
-
LeBron James' All-Star streak over as starters named
-
Allies tepid on Trump 'peace board' with $1bn permanent member fee
-
Ninth policeman dies in Guatemala gang riots, attacks
-
Man City's Foden to play through pain of broken hand
-
Milan Fashion Week showcases precision in uncertain times
-
Public media in Europe under unprecedented strain
-
Africa Cup of Nations refereeing gets a red card
-
Tributes pour in after death of Italian designer Valentino
-
Bills fire coach McDermott after playoff exit: team
-
Chile wildfires rage for third day, entire towns wiped out
-
Valentino, Italy's fashion king who pursued beauty at every turn, dies at 93
-
France PM to force budget into law, concedes 'partial failure'
-
Allies tepid on Trump 'peace board' with $1bln permanent member fee
-
'My soul is aching,' says Diaz after AFCON penalty miss
-
Ex-OPEC president in UK court ahead of corruption trial
-
Iran warns protesters who joined 'riots' to surrender
-
Stop 'appeasing' bully Trump, Amnesty chief tells Europe
-
Central African Republic top court says Touadera won 78% of vote
-
Trump tariff threat has global investors running for cover
AI startups swap independence for Big Tech's deep pockets
It's the case of the vanishing startup: some of Silicon Valley's most promising names in the fast-developing generative AI space are being gobbled up by or tied to the hip of US tech giants.
Short on funds, in the past few months promising companies like Inflection AI or Adept have seen founders and key executives quietly exit the stage to join the world's dominant tech companies through discrete transactions.
Critics believe these deals are acquisitions in all but name and have been especially designed by Microsoft or Amazon to avoid the attention of competition regulators, which the companies strenuously deny.
Meanwhile, firms like Character AI are reported to be struggling to raise the cash needed to remain independent, and some, like French startup Mistral, are thought to be especially vulnerable to being bought out by a tech giant.
Even ChatGPT's creator OpenAI is locked in a relationship with Microsoft, the world’s biggest company by market capitalization.
Microsoft helps guarantee OpenAI's future with $13 billion in investment in return for exclusive access to the startup's industry-leading models.
Amazon has its own deal with Anthropic, which makes its own high-performing models.
- 'Big money' -
Joining the revolution brought by the era-defining release of ChatGPT requires a supply of cash that only tech behemoths like Microsoft, Amazon or Google can afford.
"The ones with the big money define the rules and design the outcomes that play in their favor," said Sriram Sundararajan, a tech investor and adjunct faculty member at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University.
Breaking from typical Silicon Valley legend, generative AI won't be developed out of some founder's garage.
That type of artificial intelligence, which creates human-like content in just seconds, is a special breed of technology that requires colossal levels of computing from specialized servers.
"Startups have been founded by former research leaders at big tech companies, and they require the resources that only large cloud providers can make available," said Brendan Burke, AI analyst at Pitchbook, which tracks the venture capital world.
"They're not following the traditional entrepreneurial journey of doing more with less, they're really looking to recreate the conditions that they experienced working in a highly funded research lab."
Many of these founders, including those at Inflection or Adept, came from Google or OpenAI.
Mustafa Suleyman, the former boss of Inflection, was a leader at Google DeepMind -- and has now left his startup, with key employees in tow, to head up the consumer AI division at Microsoft.
Inflection still exists on paper but has been stripped of the very assets that gave it value.
Lining up with the big tech companies "makes a lot of sense," said Abdullah Snobar, executive director at DMZ, a startup incubator in Toronto. Their deep pockets help keep "the wheels greased and things moving forward."
- 'Sucking up all the juice' -
But aligning with established tech behemoths also risks "killing competition," potentially creating a situation where "these three big tech companies (are) sucking up all the juice" of creativity and innovation, he added.
The burning question in Silicon Valley is whether government regulators will do anything about it.
Big tech companies are increasingly in the spotlight for their appetite to eat up smaller firms.
Israeli cybersecurity company Wiz this week scrapped plans to sell to Google in what would have been the giant's biggest deal ever -- reportedly because the buyout would not have survived competition regulators.
For Inflection, antitrust regulators in the United States, European Union and Britain said they would look closely at its ties with Microsoft. Amazon's deal with Adept has raised questions with the Federal Trade Commission in Washington.
John Lopatka, professor of law at Penn State University, said "antitrust enforcers would have a difficult time blocking the arrangements" with Inflection and Adept.
However, that "does not mean they won't try."
US, European and UK regulators on Tuesday signed a joint statement insisting that they won't let big tech companies run roughshod over the nascent AI industry.
It's a sign that "regulation is catching up to AI," warned Sundararajan.
F.Mueller--VB