Tension seems to be synonymous with Microsoft and OpenAI's multi-billion-dollar partnership. It’s hard to gauge the current state of the relationship between the two companies, especially after they renewed their partnership late last year under a definitive agreement.
More trouble seems to be brewing for the once-best tech bromance, as the Financial Times reports that Microsoft may be considering legal action against OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion deal, alleging it violates a critical clause granting Microsoft exclusive rights as the AI giant’s cloud provider through Azure.
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💬 Will Microsoft sue OpenAI?
It's complicated, but it seems highly unlikely.
According to people with knowledge about the matter, Microsoft and OpenAI are currently in talks in an attempt to resolve the dispute or even reach a common ground before the matter gets out of hand, forcing them to move to court:
“We know our contract. If Amazon and OpenAI want to take a bet on the creativity of their contractual lawyers, I would back us, not them.”
Interestingly, OpenAI reportedly believes that its deal with Amazon doesn't breach the terms of its agreement with Microsoft.
However, Microsoft is unlikely to take the matter to court, as doing so would invite heightened regulatory scrutiny. The company already faces investigations in the US, UK, and EU over alleged anti-competitive licensing practices tied to Azure, leaving its plate full with ongoing probes.
Related: Microsoft reshuffles its Copilot AI leadership
It's highly likely that Microsoft and OpenAI could settle the matter out of court. Not forgetting, OpenAI is reportedly laying down the groundwork for what could be one of the largest IPOs in history, with a potential valuation of around $1 trillion. The ChatGPT maker could be getting ready to go public and even file with regulators in the second half of 2026, but it must match Microsoft's size today in four years.
“The last thing OpenAI needs is another court case right now,” indicated a person with close affiliations to Microsoft.
OpenAI has complained about Microsoft not meeting its cloud computing needs in the past. But CEO Sam Altman indicated that the company was no longer compute-constrained after announcing the $500 billion Stargate project. However, the AI firm walked away from the project after it was unable to find agreeable terms with Oracle.
Do you think Microsoft has a case here, or is this partnership simply too big to fail? Let us know what you think in the comments.
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