Li_DanLi_Dan ・ Sep. 12, 2025
Microsoft Aims for Self-Sufficiency with Massive Investment in AI, Pivoting from Dependence on OpenAI
Microsoft AI CEO suggested the company wants to forge its own path in AI, while still supporting OpenAI with cloud-computing services.

TMTPOST -- Microsoft Corporation intends to continue artificial intelligence (AI) spending frenzy to achieve self sufficiency, according to an AI business leader of the software behemoth.

Credit:Microsoft

Credit:Microsoft

Microsoft is planning to make "significant investments" in its own AI chip cluster to become "self-sufficient in AI," Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman said at an all-employee town hall meeting on Thursday, Business Insider reported. Sulemay believes the business diversity enables Microsoft to be sufficient in AI.

Instead of relying solely on OpenAI, Microsoft is using open-source models, partnering with other AI developers, and building its own models, Suleyman told employees. The massive investment plan will help the company build its own models, said he.

Suleyman's comments suggest Microsoft wants to forge its own path in AI, while still supporting OpenAI with cloud-computing services, according to the report. Thursday also saw Microsoft and OpenAI announced they had signed a non-binding memorandum of understanding (MOU) for the next phase of their partnership, without providing any details of the deal.

The MOU could set the stage for OpenAI’s restructure and eventually public listing. "Together, we remain focused on delivering the best AI tools for everyone, grounded in our shared commitment to safety," the companies said in their joint statement.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella during the town hall reassured employees that the company still benefits from the partnership while developing its AI strength.  “We have a very good partnership with OpenAI. We're very excited to continue to work with them, support them,” said Nadella.  He continued: "And at the same time, we were very clear that we also want to build our own capabilities," 

Microsoft management's remarks came as they’re working to reduce its heavy dependence on OpenAI’s technology. The partnership between two companies has grown more complex as both companies have expanded their AI ambitions.

Microsoft has been developing its own AI models, and in a filling in August 2024, the tech giant for the first time called OpenAI a “competitor”, adding the startup to a long list of AI competitors, alongside Anthropic, Amazon and Meta. OpenAI was also listed alongside Google as a competitor to Microsoft in search, thanks to OpenAI’s SearchGPT feature announced in late July 2024.

Microsoft will pay to use technology from Anthropic for some AI features in Office 365 applications, offering both OpenAI and its bitter rival’s technlogy in the apps. The Information reported on Tuesday. The reported move was deemed as Microsoft’s most aggressive step to ease reliance on OpenAI since Microsoft these years has mainly used OpenAI for new features in Word, Excel, Outlook and PowerPoint.

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