U.S. Clears Way for Antitrust Inquiries of Nvidia, Microsoft and OpenAI

The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission agreed to divide 
responsibility for investigating three major players in the artificial 
intelligence industry.
By David McCabe

Reporting from Washington
Published June 5, 2024Updated June 6, 2024, 2:42 a.m. ET

Federal regulators have reached a deal that allows them to proceed with 
antitrust investigations into the dominant roles that Microsoft, OpenAI and 
Nvidia play in the artificial intelligence industry, in the strongest sign of 
how regulatory scrutiny into the powerful technology has escalated.

The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission struck the deal over 
the past week, and it is expected to be completed in the coming days, according 
to two people with knowledge of the matter, who were not authorized to speak 
publicly about the confidential discussions.

Under the arrangement, the Justice Department will take the lead in 
investigating whether the behavior of Nvidia, the biggest maker of A.I. chips, 
has violated antitrust laws, the people said. The F.T.C. will play the lead 
role in examining the conduct of OpenAI, which makes the ChatGPT chatbot, and 
Microsoft, which has invested $13 billion in OpenAI and made deals with other 
A.I. companies, the people said.

The agreement signals intensifying scrutiny by the Justice Department and the 
F.T.C. into A.I., a rapidly advancing technology that has the potential to 
upend jobs, information and people’s lives. Both agencies have been at the 
forefront of the Biden administration’s efforts to rein in the power of the 
biggest tech companies. After a similar deal in 2019, the government 
investigated Google, Apple, Amazon and Meta and has since sued each of them on 
claims that they violated antimonopoly laws.

For months, Nvidia, Microsoft and OpenAI largely escaped the brunt of the Biden 
administration’s regulatory scrutiny. But that began to change as generative 
A.I., which can produce humanlike text, photos, videos and audio, burst onto 
the scene in late 2022 and created an industry frenzy.

Regulators have recently signaled that they want to get ahead of developments 
in A.I. In July, the F.T.C. opened an investigation into whether OpenAI had 
harmed consumers through its collection of data. In January, the F.T.C. also 
started a broad inquiry into strategic partnerships between tech giants and 
A.I. start-ups, including Microsoft’s investment in OpenAI and Google’s and 
Amazon’s investments in Anthropic, another young A.I. company.

Still, the United States lags behind Europe in regulating artificial 
intelligence. European Union officials agreed last year on landmark rules to 
govern the fast-evolving technology, focused on the riskiest ways in which it 
can be used. In Washington last month, a group of senators released legislative 
recommendations for A.I., calling for $32 billion in annual spending to propel 
American leadership of the technology but holding off on asking for specific 
new regulations.

The discussions between the F.T.C. and Justice Department over the A.I. 
companies entered their final stages within the last week and involved the 
senior levels of both agencies, said one person with knowledge of the 
discussions, who is an F.T.C. official.

Lina Khan, the chair of the F.T.C., said in a February interview that when it 
came to A.I., the agency was trying to spot “potential problems at the 
inception rather than years and years and years later, when problems are deeply 
baked in and much more difficult to rectify.”

Spokeswomen for the F.T.C. and the Justice Department declined to comment. 
Microsoft and OpenAI didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment. A 
representative for Nvidia declined to comment.

<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/05/technology/nvidia-microsoft-openai-antitrust-doj-ftc.html>

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