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Inside Microsoft’s complicated relationship with OpenAI

19 June 2025 at 16:00

Beyond the selfies between Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, and the friendly conversations between the pair on stage, all is not well with Microsoft's $13 billion AI investment. Over the past year, multiple reports have painted a picture of a Microsoft and OpenAI relationship that is straining under pressure.

As OpenAI battles for access to more compute power and less reliance on Microsoft, tensions have been rising during negotiations over the future of OpenAI's business and its Microsoft partnership. Microsoft backed down on being the exclusive cloud provider for OpenAI earlier this year, but OpenAI still needs Microsoft's approval to convert part of its business to a for-profit company. That's led to a potentially explosive outcome.

OpenAI executives have now reportedly considered accusing Microsoft of anticompetitive behavior, which could mean regulators look even more closely at the terms of Microsoft and OpenAI's contract for potential violations of antitrust laws. The Wall Street Journal reports that OpenAI's potential acquisition of AI coding tool Windsurf is at the heart of the latest standoff, as OpenAI wants Windsurf to be exempt from its existin …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Why I’ve covered Microsoft for 25 years

4 April 2025 at 14:30

IҀ™ve always been fascinated by Microsoft, and itҀ™s led me on a somewhat surreal path to covering the company for most of my life. It all started in my teenage years, when my curiosity over the inner workings of Windows led to brief moments of fame and lots of moments of trouble with MicrosoftҀ™s lawyers.

As a nerdy teenager in the early Ҁ™00s I would spend hours building PCs to run prerelease versions of Windows, and I would regularly lug my custom machines and CRT monitors to house parties. I would DJ the latest MP3s I had downloaded from Napster and try to impress my friends with a secret new Windows feature they had never seen before.

While Windows rarely impressed my friends, my passion for unreleased Microsoft software really kicked up a gear with Windows XP. Codenamed Whistler, it was a big departure, visually, from Windows 2000 and Windows ME, and there was a lot to play around with during early beta builds.

Microsoft issued public builds of Windows XP in late 2000, but the really interesting parts were hidden away in the daily builds that MicrosoftҀ™s Windows engineers were working on. I wanted to get access to as many of these as possible, so I started to downlo …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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