Anthropic, a prominent AI research organization, has secured an additional $4 billion investment from Amazon, bringing the tech giant's total investment in the company to $8 billion. This significant infusion of capital will further solidify the partnership between Anthropic and Amazon, with the latter's cloud computing division, Amazon Web Services (AWS), serving as the primary platform for training Anthropic's flagship generative AI models.
The agreement also involves collaboration with Annapurna Labs, AWS' chipmaking division, to develop future generations of Trainium accelerators, custom-built chips designed specifically for training AI models. According to Anthropic, their engineers will work closely with Annapurna's chip design team to maximize computational efficiency from the hardware, which will be leveraged to train the company's most advanced foundation models.
In a statement, AWS CEO Matt Garman expressed his enthusiasm for the partnership, highlighting Anthropic's pace of innovation and commitment to responsible AI development. The collaboration is expected to push the boundaries of what customers can achieve with generative AI technologies, with Anthropic utilizing Trainium chips to train its upcoming models and Inferentia, Amazon's in-house chip, to deploy those models.
This new investment brings Anthropic's total venture capital raised to $13.7 billion, according to Crunchbase. The company has been in talks with Amazon for several months, with reports suggesting that Anthropic projected it would burn through over $2.7 billion in 2024 as it trained and scaled up its AI products. The pressure was on to secure new funding, and the deal with Amazon appears to have been too attractive to pass up, despite Anthropic's reported preference for Nvidia chips.
Anthropic co-founder and CEO Dario Amodei emphasized the significance of the company's work with AWS, which has greatly expanded over the past year. Through Amazon Bedrock, AWS' platform for hosting and fine-tuning generative models, Anthropic's Claude family of models are being used by tens of thousands of customers. The collaboration has been instrumental in bringing Claude's capabilities to millions of end users across these customers, Amodei noted.
Beyond AWS, Amazon is reportedly working with Anthropic to revamp the former's consumer products. This includes plans to replace the in-house models powering Alexa, Amazon's virtual assistant, with Anthropic's models, following technical challenges encountered by Amazon. Additionally, AWS customers will gain early access to the ability to fine-tune new Claude models on their data.
The partnership has, however, attracted regulatory scrutiny. The FTC has sent letters to Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, requiring the companies to explain the impacts their investments in startups such as Anthropic have on the competitive landscape of generative AI. The U.K.'s Competition and Markets Authority has also opened inquiries into big tech tie-ups with AI firms, recently approving Alphabet's partnership and investment in Anthropic.
Anthropic continues to maintain pace with other frontier AI labs, releasing new functionality like Computer Use, which enables the company's current best model, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, to perform tasks on a PC autonomously. However, the company has faced setbacks, including an unexpected price hike for one of its models and a delayed launch of its next-gen model, Claude 3.5 Opus. To boost revenue, Anthropic has shifted focus to releasing new tools and plans on top of existing models, including a desktop client, enterprise and "team" tiers, and mobile apps.
Anthropic was co-launched in 2021 by Amodei, who was once VP of research at OpenAI and reportedly split with the firm after disagreements over OpenAI's roadmap. Amodei brought with him a number of ex-OpenAI employees to start Anthropic, including OpenAI's former policy lead Jack Clark. The company often positions itself as more safety-focused than OpenAI, a key differentiator in the competitive AI landscape.
In conclusion, the partnership between Anthropic and Amazon marks a significant milestone in the development and deployment of generative AI technologies. As the AI landscape continues to evolve, this collaboration is likely to have far-reaching implications for the industry, with both companies poised to unlock the full potential of their technology.