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[News] Intel Reportedly Rejected OpenAI Investment, Missing Out on AI Opportunity


2024-08-08 Semiconductors editor

According to a report from Reuters citing sources on August 7th, American chip giant Intel had an opportunity to invest in OpenAI several years ago but ultimately had the investment rejected by company executives, resulting in a missed opportunity.

Reportedly, Intel and OpenAI discussed collaboration several times between 2017 and 2018. At that time, OpenAI was still a nascent nonprofit research organization focused on developing relatively unknown generative AI technologies.

The discussions included Intel potentially purchasing a 15% stake in OpenAI for USD 1 billion in cash and possibly producing hardware for OpenAI at cost in exchange for an additional 15% stake.

Sources cited by the report further reveal that OpenAI was very interested in Intel’s investment, primarily because it would reduce the company’s reliance on NVIDIA chips and enable OpenAI to build its own infrastructure.

However, Intel ultimately rejected the deal. One reason cited by the report was that then-CEO Bob Swan did not believe generative AI could be commercialized in the short term and was concerned that Intel’s investment would not yield returns. Another reason was that Intel’s data center division was unwilling to produce hardware for OpenAI at cost.

After Intel’s refusal, Microsoft began investing in OpenAI in 2019. In 2022, OpenAI launched the chatbot ChatGPT, reportedly sparking a global AI boom and achieving a valuation of USD 80 billion. Per the data from CB Insights, it has made OpenAI the third most valuable tech startup worldwide, behind only ByteDance and SpaceX.

Neither Intel nor OpenAI has commented on these reports.

As per a previous report from The Atlantic, Intel had previously declined to produce processors for Apple’s iPhone, a misstep that caused Intel to miss the opportunity to transition into the mobile area.

The news from Reuters this time further suggests that Intel has made a similar mistake in the AI domain.

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(Photo credit: Intel)

Please note that this article cites information from Reuters and The Atlantic.

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