According to recent reporting by The Wall Street Journal, OpenAI's acquisition of the coding startup Windsurf for $3 billion has (re)ignited some tensions between the former and Microsoft. In exchange for its financial support and infrastructure, Microsoft is entitled to early access to all of OpenAI's technologies and intellectual property. However, per the WSJ report, OpenAI does not want to grant Microsoft access to Windsurf's intellectual property.
Coding assistants have become one of the most lucrative use cases for generative AI. Anysphere, the company behind the viral assistant Cursor, has already secured its third funding round in less than a year. Microsoft also has a coding assistant, GitHub Copilot, and would certainly benefit from Windsurf's IP, to OpenAI's detriment. Thus, the startup currently faces a predicament where, unless it finds a way to keep Microsoft from accessing Windsurf's IP, it will be effectively helping an already tough competitor get ahead.
The current tension follows several attempts by both companies to renegotiate the terms of their partnership. While OpenAI wants to end Microsoft's exclusivity as a cloud provider and distributor of its technology, Microsoft wants access to OpenAI's technology, even after the startup declares its models have reached what is vaguely termed "artificial general intelligence". Under current terms, OpenAI could end its partnership with the tech giant once it reaches this milestone.
Unfortunately for OpenAI, the startup faces a fast-approaching year-end deadline to convert from nonprofit to for-profit status or lose $20 billion in funding. Microsoft's approval is essential to this conversion, and critically, both companies have also been unable to agree on how much of the new public-benefit corporation would be owned by Microsoft once the conversion is complete. The WSJ reports that OpenAI has even considered what it deems a "nuclear option" to free itself from Microsoft: accusing the latter of anticompetitive behavior during their partnership.
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