Amazon, Microsoft AI partnerships face potential UK antitrust probe

Share This Post

The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has taken preliminary steps to investigate recent partnerships made by top AI sector participants, according to an April 24 release.

The CMA invited comments on Microsoft’s partnership with Mistral AI, Amazon’s partnership with Anthropic, and Microsoft’s hiring and licensing arrangement with Inflection AI.

The antitrust agency aims to determine whether each firm’s activities “fall within UK merger rules” and their potential impact on competition. Joel Bamford, Executive Director of Mergers, said the CMA will conduct any assessment “objectively and impartially.”

The agency said a past report identified a web of more than 90 partnerships and strategic investments, some of which may not fall within merger rules.

The CMA’s current invitations to comment (ITC) do not begin a formal review. The agency has not reached any conclusions and does not necessarily have jurisdiction for further action.

The comment period has a May 9 deadline.

Companies respond

Several targetted companies have contested the regulator’s action due to the nature of their partnerships.

In a statement to CNBC, Amazon called the review “unprecedented” for a partnership of its type abd emphasized that it only provided a limited investment to Anthropic — which does not grant it a board seat or an observer role.

Additionally, Anthropic relies on multiple cloud providers beyond Amazon Web Services for its operations.

Anthropic separately told CNBC that it operates independently from Amazon. The company said it intends to cooperate with the CMA and will provide the requested information.

Microsoft told CNBC it is “confident” that hiring and fractional investments differ from mergers. It said it would provide the CMA with information.

Original partnerships

Amazon entered its $4 billion partnership with Anthropic in March, while Microsoft confirmed a $16 million investment with Mistral in February.

The CMA described each partnership’s computer resource sharing and business aspects but only mentioned the Amazon partnership’s financial aspects.

Microsoft also reached a licensing arrangement with Inflection in March, simultaneously hiring Inflection co-founder Mustafa Suleyman and several other employees. The size of the deal is estimated at $650 million.

Microsoft has also partnered extensively with OpenAI. The CMA opened a comment period on the partnership in December 2023 but closed it in January. It did not lead to a probe.

The post Amazon, Microsoft AI partnerships face potential UK antitrust probe appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Bitcoin Loss Holders Highest Since October As BTC Crashes To $87,000

On-chain data shows the number of Bitcoin loss addresses has shot up following the cryptocurrency’s dive toward $87,000 Bitcoin Market Delivered Shock As Price Plummets 7% In Past Day Bitcoin

Strategy stock is down 55% from ATH but forced liquidations highly unlikely – Kobeissi

Strategy (previously MicroStrategy) stock has plunged more than 55% from its all-time high, fueling speculation that the company could be forced to sell off its massive Bitcoin (BTC) holdings With

Cardano (ADA) Price Prediction for February 26

The post Cardano (ADA) Price Prediction for February 26 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News ADA, the native token of the Cardano blockchain, is poised for a massive price recovery due to its

Why Ethereum Is A Must-Watch: Expert Analysis Highlights 4 Strong Bullish Indicators

As the new week begins, Ethereum (ETH)—the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization—has seen a significant decline, dropping nearly 10% below the critical support level of $2,500 

Chainflip to Block Bybit Hack Funds With New Protocol Upgrade

Chainflip, a decentralized cross-chain service and market maker, is implementing an upgrade to block illicit funds, specifically those from the recent Bybit hack Hacked Funds Expose LPs to Excessive

Crypto transfers are reportedly suffering restrictions in Europe

Crypto transfers are being restricted in Europe through heavy know-your-customer (KYC) procedures and blocks, potentially linked to the Travel Rule, according to several local reports Hasu, the