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Inside Amazon’s Low Key Plan To Dominate AINo ChatGPT, no chip sales, no worries. Amazon is confident it has the right strategy to win the AI war.
Amazon’s absence from this year’s generative AI bonanza has been a bit puzzling. The company invented Alexa, intuiting people’s interest in speaking with computers, yet when OpenAI released ChatGPT it seemed to cede the territory. But rather than sitting out the game, Amazon is just waiting to play on its terms. Instead of building one AI product, it wants a piece of all of them. And it’s not shy about its ambition. “I wouldn't be at all surprised if just the AI part of our cloud computing business was larger than the rest of AWS combined in a couple years,” Amazon VP Matt Wood told me in an interview at the Amazon Web Services Summit this week. Rather than releasing just one product or large language model by itself, Amazon’s wants to enable companies building with generative AI to create any product using any model. Put another way, instead of developing one ChatGPT or GPT-4, Amazon wants to empower every would-be ChatGPT developer to use any GPT-like model and get going. Amazon will supply the model access, customization, and raw computing power to developers, and make its money as they build. “It is a great business opportunity,” said Andrew Lipsman, principal analyst at Insider Intelligence. “It’s smart strategically to focus on where the profits are.” At the core of Amazon’s effort is a new product called Bedrock. Available inside AWS, Bedrock lets developers select from a range of AI models, including from Anthropic, AI21 Labs, Stability AI, and even Meta’s Llama 2. Using these models, developers can build their own products, like AI chatbots, and then run them on AWS’s infrastructure. Bloomberg, for instance, built BloombergGPT, a bot for financial information, on a Bedrock precursor called Sagemaker. To do it, the company took four decades of unstructured financial data and analytics, loaded it into AWS, added some other training material, and tuned the model. Bedrock should make such a process faster, with pre-loaded models in a catalog. Once built, Amazon then support the products. When people chat with BloombergGPT, for instance, it uses Amazon’s storage to work, so Amazon gets paid every step of the way. “We get paid by providing compute capacity to actually do the model training, and for providing the access to the large amounts of storage that are needed,” said Wood. “You may train a model once a month, once a week, but you're going to be running predictions and inference and chatting with that model hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands of times a day.” Competitors including Microsoft and Google offer similar capabilities, but Amazon has a few advantages. Without its own consumer chatbot, or a multi-billion dollar attachment to an AI research house, it’s pitching itself as a company with more neutrality and pragmatism than its peers. This could be compelling for developers looking for more customizability or assurances their data stays at home, a pressing issue for many. It’s also helpful for Amazon that so many internet companies already have their data on its cloud. “You'd be surprised how many customers have exabytes of data on AWS,” said Wood. An exabyte is one billion gigabytes. Amazon does have its own model, called Titan, that it offers alongside its menu of others. So it’s not entirely neutral. The company also develops its own AI-specific chips, which underly some of the computing, but it doesn’t sell them like NVIDIA does. Both efforts are meant to enhance the core service offering. Long ago, Amazon learned there’s value to being first. It established its cloud services lead early and still dominates. But it’s playing catch up today as Microsoft appears to be in the lead, with 11,000 customers using its generative AI service via a partnership with OpenAI. In this case though, Amazon is joining right after the starting gun, with a plan that could work no matter what model or product wins. “We are three steps into a marathon race,” said Wood, “And I don't think anybody without a smile on their face could call a winner three steps into a marathon, right?” Identity Theft Affects 1 in 3 Americans (sponsor)It's not just robo-calls and phishing scams, data brokers are buying (and selling) your address, phone number, and SSN on the internet. When someone steals your identity with that info, it's often too late for recourse. How does it happen? Often via those privacy policies you've 'read' and clicked 'agree' to. They can sign away your information and, once it's out there, it's not easy to fix. Incogni helps you fight back. It hunts down your sensitive data and scrubs it from the internet, confronting data brokers on your behalf. Help protect yourself from identity theft, robo calls, or scammers attacking your credit. Don’t wait, Big Technology readers can get 55% off Incogni today with code BIGTECH. What Else I’m Reading, Etc.Adobe employees worry their AI software will kill graphic designer jobs [Insider] Adobe’s Figma deal comes under fire in Europe [Reuters] The FTC is getting ready to bring its big Amazon case [Politico] TikTok wants to do text posts too [Axios] Threads adds a following feed [TechCrunch] People are tricking AI resume readers [Washington Post] Reddit users continue to lambast CEO Steve Huffman [Vice] Obama’s personal chef drowned while paddleboarding in Martha's Vineyard [NPR] How to spot someone who’s drowning [Slate] See a story you like? Tweet it with “tip @bigtechnology” for consideration in this section. Number Of The Week397 million Snapchat’s daily active users, up 14% from last year’s second quarter. Still, the company’s revenue slipped 4% over the year, underscoring its business challenges. Quote Of The Week“I was hoping that the oppenheimer movie would inspire a generation of kids to be physicists but it really missed the mark on that.” Open AI CEO Sam Altman’s review of a movie portraying the invention of the atom bomb, which he’s compared to AI research. Advertise with Big Technology?Advertising with Big Technology gets your product, service, or cause in front of the tech world’s top decision-makers. To reach 135,000+ plugged-in tech insiders, reply to this email or write [email protected] This Week on Big Technology Podcast: The Professor Who Required His Students Use ChatGPT In ClassEthan Mollick is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton business school and writes One Useful Thing on Substack. He is one of the world’s foremost researchers on practical applications of generative AI and is an immensely engaging speaker. Professor Mollick joins Big Technology Podcast for a vibrant discussion of how AI changes schoolwork and office work, covering his decision to make his students use ChatGPT in class. Tune in for a insight-packed interview that will illuminate where the field is heading. You can listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks again for reading. Please share Big Technology if you like it! And hit that Like Button! It won’t charge you a penny for storage, but will probably connect to some fancy data center, somewhere. C’mon try it out, you’ll love it. My book Always Day One digs into the tech giants’ inner workings, focusing on automation and culture. I’d be thrilled if you’d give it a read. You can find it here. Questions? Email me by responding to this email, or by writing [email protected] News tips? Find me on Signal at 516-695-8680
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