Everyone wants to make AI chips, UK antitrust hawks eye cloud providers, and MGM rebuffs ransom demand


Generative artificial intelligence continued to dominate the news this week as Anthropic reportedly is raising an additional $2 billion from Google and others, and reports indicated that gen AI partners OpenAI and Microsoft are each looking to design their own AI chips during a severe shortage of graphics processing units from Nvidia.

Meanwhile, U.K. antitrust authorities zeroed in on cloud computing providers, in particular Amazon Web Services and Microsoft. On this side of the pond, the Justice Department’s antitrust case against Google plodded ahead, though some have doubts about the Federal Trade Commission’s similarly sweeping case against Amazon.

On the cybersecurity front, MGM Resorts International declined to pay a ransom following a costly attack that took out its systems, a contrast to Caesar’s Entertainment’s decision to pay $30 million after an attack last month.

Finally, chipmaking giant Intel keeps spinning things out, this time its programmable-chip business, to shore up its finances.

Hear more about this and other news in theCUBE Pod, John Furrier’s and Dave Vellante’s weekly podcast, out now on YouTube. And don’t miss Vellante’s weekly Breaking Analysis, coming Saturday, in which he will dig into how higher interest rates may depress tech spending for longer than many people may assume.

So here’s the news we reported this week:

AI everywhere

It appears Google isn’t out of the Anthropic AIverse yet: Anthropic seeks huge investment from Google just days after Amazon invested billions It’s quite a bit behind OpenAI on revenue apparently, but its enterprise focus and seemingly more open partnership strategy would seem to bode well.

Billions of dollars burning a hole in OpenAI’s pocket? Maybe, but they gotta get more compute somewhere: Report: OpenAI could develop custom AI chips

And late-breaking Friday, Microsoft also may do its own AI chip.

More fun with more realistic weird images: Microsoft integrates OpenAI’s DALL-E 3 into Bing for enhanced image creation

And just a whole heck of a lot of new gen AI-powered business applications — but aren’t they all today?:

Dell enhances its generative AI hardware and software portfolio…

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