Microsoft Singles Out Google's Competitive Edge in Generative AI (reuters.com) 16
Google enjoys a competitive edge in generative AI due to its trove of data and AI-optimised chips, Microsoft has told EU antitrust regulators, underscoring the rivalry between the two tech giants. From a report: The comments by Microsoft were in response to a consultation launched by the European Commission in January on the level of competition in generative AI. The growing popularity of generative AI, which can generate human-like responses to written prompts and is exemplified by Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's chatbot Gemini, has triggered concerns about misinformation and fake news.
"Today, only one company - Google - is vertically integrated in a manner that provides it with strength and independence at every AI layer from chips to a thriving mobile app store. Everyone else must rely on partnerships to innovate and compete," Microsoft said in its report to the Commission. It said Google's self-supply AI semiconductors would give it a competitive advantage for the years to come, while its large sets of proprietary data from Google Search Index and YouTube enabled it to train its large language model Gemini. "YouTube provides an unparalleled set of video content; it hosts an estimated 14 billion videos. Google has access to such content; but other AI developers do not," Microsoft said.
"Today, only one company - Google - is vertically integrated in a manner that provides it with strength and independence at every AI layer from chips to a thriving mobile app store. Everyone else must rely on partnerships to innovate and compete," Microsoft said in its report to the Commission. It said Google's self-supply AI semiconductors would give it a competitive advantage for the years to come, while its large sets of proprietary data from Google Search Index and YouTube enabled it to train its large language model Gemini. "YouTube provides an unparalleled set of video content; it hosts an estimated 14 billion videos. Google has access to such content; but other AI developers do not," Microsoft said.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
The license that Youtube has content providers agree to is incredibly broad. Youtube can basically use that content however it would like, including sublicensing it, monetizing it, and retaining it after you have deleted it from the service. People uploading stuff to Youtube give Youtube an incredible amount of rights over their work.
Github's license, on the other hand, does not grant them extensive rights. Heck, they treat most repos as private. Worse, many of the Free Software licenses that they pro
Tung (Score:4, Insightful)
Come on, Microsoft. For 20 years you have been the king of non-innovators, wating to see what works, then hemorrhaging cash and market position to conjure into existence competition. Usually chronically and unrecoverably lagging at that point.
Few companies have the cash one could say, well, go build your own custom chips, giant databases, and vertical integration. You're one of the few! You'll still lag unless your ai becomes outstanding, but them's the breaks.
Google's been using captchas to gather info on scene analysis for almost that long. Y tu?
Google doesn't fab chips (Score:5, Informative)
Oh NO (Score:5, Interesting)
We just need a global GDPR at this point.
Re: (Score:2)
Classic "I was bad, but the other one was badder!" defense. Had a good laugh ...
Re: (Score:2)
Uh, no thanks ... that's totally the wrong solution. GDPR fucked itself off because of the stupid cookie notice law. Anyone who came up with that should be locked up in a mental institution. ..even ones that don't need it, because the law is scary.
1. Every website has the annoying pop-up notice
2. Everyone clicks "Accept All Cookies"
3. Most websites display GDPR notices that are managed and tracked by a few stupid companies like Onetrust -- and that's dumb in itself.
Re: (Score:2)
1. Every website has the annoying pop-up notice ..even ones that don't need it, because the law is scary.
Some don't. The ones that don't really operate in the EU. And most of them that do show this bar have a single button to click for "Necessary Only" or "Reject All".
2. Everyone clicks "Accept All Cookies"
Again, not usually. I never click that. I've taught my entire family not to click it. We train clients not to click it. And even if you do click it, you just go back to the pre-GDPR state of the site
ChatGPT is 2 years behind the times (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I can ask Gemini a question, and the answers are of the current time.
Whatever that means, so it claims.
Re: ChatGPT is 2 years behind the times (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Your knowledge is behind the times. ChatGPT can access current data as well. https://www.bbc.com/news/techn... [bbc.com]
Search Engine advantage (Score:2)
So, Microsoft is saying that their own Bing search engine is not anywhere near as good as Google, and the latter being more popular (even though almost every computer in the world comes pre-installed with the Microsoft engine) constitutes an unfair competitive advantage that must be sanctioned or eliminated by the Government.
"My product sucks. Please bring out guns and prisons to take down the competition for me!"
waaaahhh (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Google's is racist AF
Pretty much indisputable at this point. Google is an anti-white racist company.
it's made by deranged racists
This blow up with Gemini is going to be hard to live down. As a white guy, I certainly am not anxious to try it.
MS has plenty of time to make their crappy AI more subtly racist.
Yes, they will need to conceal the anti-white racism a bit better, but I have little doubt that it's going to be racist. Any AI image-bot that created black and brown folks in the images with the same frequency the occur in the population would be pilloried for being a wh1te supr3amacist.
What's wrong about doing something right? (Score:2)
Google advanced AI quite a lot. What's bad about doing do? They both saw a trend and they helped progress. Now they are in a good position. What's the problem with that?
And I don't understand Microsoft either. While Google has good hardware and good models for, e.g., image recognition, it's generative AI are failures. Gemini sucks while MS does have a good partnership with OpenAI who create GenAI that actually work. Yeah, ChatGPT is getting worse (probably because they are optimizing costs), but Gemini isn'