This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:
The chart of the day
What we're watching
What we're reading
Economic data releases and earnings
After a fundraising round that pinned the AI startup's value at more than $60 billion, Anthropic (ANTH.PVT) has enjoyed a vigorous run.
The company notched an early court victory over a copyright lawsuit with implications for AI's future, and now it stands in contention to power Apple's new version of Siri.
That would place Anthropic's Claude model in one of the most enviable positions in tech.
This week, Bloomberg reported that Apple is considering using AI technology from outside firms to power an updated version of its assistant, possibly sidelining its own in-house efforts, as part of a broader push to keep pace in the AI arms race.
The report comes on the heels of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's aggressive recruitment drive to poach top AI researchers and engineers at rival shops. He has offered as much as $100 million to pull outside talent into the Meta fold. On top of that, Zuckerberg had reportedly tried to acquire the AI startup Safe Superintelligence, but after the offer was turned down pursued its CEO instead. Meta also recently invested $14 billion in the data-labeling startup Scale AI and hired its top executive, Alexandr Wang, to help lead a new superintelligence unit inside the company.
The intertwining developments capture something important about the business of AI development. They get at how the public views AI's leading upstarts and the tech platforms competing with and courting them. Call it AI's corporate phase.
If the last two years were defined largely by the advancements in technology — the splashy presentations and dazzling updates about "compute" — we've now moved on to more refined questions about consumer integration and where these products fit into the tech ecosystem. The focus is moving from feats of research, development, engineering, and infrastructure to triumphs of dealmaking, marketing, and hiring. It's "go-to-market" time, and it's the MBAs' turn now.
And that makes sense. It's harder to refute just how massively capable AI has become and how the conversation around it has broadened, even as incidents where chatbots hallucinate or cite fake sources still repeatedly crop up. That sharpening of AI's skill and capability has another logical conclusion: If Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and the rest continue down their path of ever-increasing power, what exactly differentiates them from each other? What happens when AI becomes a commodity like the internet or even a search engine?
Perhaps this is why Apple is content to take this route. If there's one company that has exhibited a mastery of marketing, design, logistics, and consumer relationships, it's the one that has taken the MP3 player, tablets, smartphones, and smartwatches from the niche to the mainstream. And even managed to convince people that headphone jacks were unnecessary.
Innovation isn't cheap, but when you've been the most valuable company for years, you can probably afford to just buy it.
Hamza Shaban is a reporter for Yahoo Finance covering markets and the economy. Follow Hamza on X @hshaban.
Click here for the latest technology news that will impact the stock market
Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance
免責聲明:投資有風險,本文並非投資建議,以上內容不應被視為任何金融產品的購買或出售要約、建議或邀請,作者或其他用戶的任何相關討論、評論或帖子也不應被視為此類內容。本文僅供一般參考,不考慮您的個人投資目標、財務狀況或需求。TTM對信息的準確性和完整性不承擔任何責任或保證,投資者應自行研究並在投資前尋求專業建議。