Microsoft and OpenAI at odds - lawsuit brewing?
A significant crack has appeared in the years-long, close collaboration between Microsoft and OpenAI in recent weeks, as information about a potential legal dispute between the companies has emerged.
According to sources (paywall) from the financial newspaper Financial Times, Microsoft is considering suing OpenAI for breach of contract, stemming from OpenAI's recent collaboration agreement with Amazon's cloud service, AWS. The agreement with Amazon may violate the exclusivity agreement between Microsoft and OpenAI, which stipulates that certain AI models developed by OpenAI should only be available through Microsoft's Azure cloud platform.
The partnership between Microsoft and OpenAI has been exceptionally close since 2019. Microsoft has invested over $13 billion in OpenAI over the years and, through the deal, acquired approximately a 27 percent ownership stake in the AI company. The agreement between the companies stipulates that OpenAI can collaborate with other cloud service providers, but this activity has strict limits. Specifically, the enterprise platform named Frontier, designed for developing and managing AI agents, has been agreed to operate exclusively on Azure.

Streaming service Spotify has released a new feature aimed at users particular about sound quality - so-called audiophiles. The new exclusive mode offers the ability to play music on a computer as purely and bit-perfectly as possible, without the computer's own audio processing altering the original sound. The feature is available for Windows and will also be coming to Macs later.
The world's most famous printed dictionary, Encyclopedia Britannica, and its subsidiary Merriam-Webster have sued AI company OpenAI, accusing the company of copyright and trademark infringement.



