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OpenAI Weighs Antitrust Action Against Microsoft Amid Tensions Over AI Partnership

Executives at OpenAI have internally discussed whether to accuse Microsoft of anticompetitive behavior, potentially seeking a federal regulatory review of their contractual relationship, according to a report from the Wall Street Journal.

Microsoft, a major backer of OpenAI since 2019 with an investment exceeding $10 billion over time, has been a core infrastructure partner via its Azure cloud services. However, tensions between the companies appear to be growing as they negotiate the terms of OpenAI’s ongoing transition into a public-benefit corporation — a step that requires Microsoft’s approval.

Disputes and Strategic Divergences:

  • Talks between the two sides have dragged on for months without a final agreement on Microsoft’s future equity stake in OpenAI.

  • According to The Information, OpenAI is pushing for Microsoft to accept a 33% stake in a restructured subsidiary in exchange for giving up rights to future profits.

  • OpenAI also seeks to revise clauses that currently give Microsoft exclusive hosting rights for its models, potentially opening the door for other cloud providers like Google Cloud, which OpenAI has already begun engaging to expand its compute capacity.

Microsoft, reportedly unwilling to concede to OpenAI’s proposed restructuring, is said to be seeking further concessions. Still, both companies issued a joint statement to Reuters expressing optimism:

“Talks are ongoing and we are optimistic we will continue to build together for years to come.”

Possible Antitrust Implications:

Should OpenAI move forward with an antitrust complaint or regulatory appeal, it could dramatically reshape one of the most influential alliances in the artificial intelligence landscape. Microsoft’s deep integration with OpenAI — spanning cloud infrastructure, product embedding (like Copilot in Office), and funding — could come under increased regulatory scrutiny, especially in the U.S. and EU, where antitrust enforcement in tech has intensified.

This development highlights OpenAI’s increasing desire to diversify partnerships and assert strategic independence, even from its most powerful corporate backer.

OpenAI Awarded $200 Million U.S. Defense Contract for AI Development

OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, has secured a $200 million contract to develop advanced artificial intelligence tools for the U.S. Department of Defense, the Pentagon announced on Monday.

The contract involves creating prototype frontier AI capabilities aimed at tackling critical national security challenges across both warfighting and enterprise domains. The work will mainly take place in and around Washington, with an expected completion date set for July 2026.

OpenAI recently reported a surge in its annualized revenue run rate to $10 billion as of June, fueled by widespread AI adoption. Earlier this year, in March, OpenAI revealed plans to raise up to $40 billion in a funding round led by SoftBank Group, valuing the company at around $300 billion. The firm also reported having 500 million weekly active users by the end of March.

Separately, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget issued new guidance in April encouraging federal agencies to foster a competitive American AI marketplace, while exempting national security and defense systems from some regulations.

Italy Probes Chinese AI Firm DeepSeek Over Misinformation Risks

Italy’s antitrust and consumer protection agency AGCM announced Monday it has launched a formal investigation into Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek, alleging the company failed to clearly warn users about the potential for its chatbot to generate false or misleading information.

The regulator stated that DeepSeek’s platform does not provide “sufficiently clear, immediate and intelligible” alerts about the risk of AI-generated “hallucinations” — a term used in the AI field to describe instances when models produce inaccurate or completely fabricated information in response to user prompts.

AGCM is focusing on the consumer rights aspect, emphasizing the risk users might unknowingly rely on erroneous AI outputs due to insufficient warning or transparency.

DeepSeek did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the investigation.

This marks the second run-in DeepSeek has had with Italian authorities this year. In February, the country’s data protection regulator ordered the startup to suspend access to its chatbot within Italy after the company failed to resolve concerns related to its privacy policy.

The probe highlights increasing regulatory scrutiny over generative AI models in Europe, particularly regarding transparency, data protection, and consumer rights.