Alastair Woolcock, VP Analyst at Gartner, also sees the adjusted agreement between Microsoft and OpenAI as an inevitable response to a changing AI market: “The first major AI shadow investment is being rewritten for a cold multi-front AI war. Frontier AI is too capital intensive and infrastructure-bound – it was only a matter of time before the cloud exclusivity deal succumbed to this change.”
For Microsoft, this is a controlled concession, says the Gartner man: “From an investor perspective, Microsoft controls the operational AI level in companies – through Copilot, Azure, security, workflow integration, data gravity and AI operations. For OpenAI it is a liberation because demand is no longer the biggest limitation, but rather computing power, capital and sales. If one partner controls everything, OpenAI cannot develop into a global AI platform.”
For IT leaders in companies, Woolcock sees more choice in the future as a result of the changed deal, but not necessarily less dependency: “The lock-in only shifts within the stack – from the cloud infrastructure to the alignment of the AI ecosystem, the orchestration of agents, workflow control and data management. This makes it clear that the next phase of the AI competition will not be fought through traditional ownership – but through flexible alliances, access to computing power, chips and Enterprise distribution networks.”
Tony Olvet, group vice president at IDC, does not expect the adjusted partnership to have a negative impact on Microsoft or OpenAI implementations in the short term. However, this does not apply in terms of planning measures, as he notes: “CIOs and CTOs will have more options for obtaining OpenAI functions in the future. There will also be greater commercial leverage and an increased need for AI governance across multiple channels.”
This has strategic implications, says Olvet. The analyst advises companies to continue to rely on strong partners – but at the same time design AI architectures, contracts and governance frameworks that can adapt as the market develops across different clouds, models and providers. (fm)
This article is im Original published by our sister publication Computerworld.com.
