Competition authorities need to move fast and break up AI | 如何打破大型科技公司在AI领域的过度集中? - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT英语电台

Competition authorities need to move fast and break up AI
如何打破大型科技公司在AI领域的过度集中?

Unless regulators act, Big Tech’s dominance over the digital economy will be cemented
监管机构若不采取行动,大型科技公司对数字经济的主导地位将持续巩固。
00:00

undefined

The writer is a former senior adviser on AI at the Federal Trade Commission and managing director of the AI Now Institute. Amba Kak also contributed to this article

If AI is poised to occupy an increasingly central place in our digital infrastructure, it’s time to think long and hard about who will control it.

At present, Big Tech companies such as Microsoft, Google and Amazon are positioned to strengthen their foothold on the digital economy, consolidating their power by dominating both the commercial AI industry and the horizon for future AI research. Without the robust enforcement of competition laws, generative AI could irreversibly cement Big Tech’s advantage, giving a handful of companies power over technology that mediates much of our lives.

There are several reasons why, as things stand, there is no AI without Big Tech. The biggest technology companies have significant first-mover advantages in this market. Most notably, they have access to the resources large-scale AI is dependent on, from massive data sets to the computational power to process them, to the skills and expertise needed to build these AI systems.

These resource dependencies are a chokepoint even for companies such as Microsoft and Alphabet, Google’s parent company. For example, Alphabet recently combined its AI teams, forcing them to overcome intense internal rivalries, while Microsoft is limiting internal access to AI hardware to keep Bing’s GPT-4 chatbot and its new Office 365 tools up and running. Sam Altman, chief executive of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, described his company’s computational costs as “eye-watering”. While new start-ups are appearing, OpenAI, Anthropic, Cohere and even the open-source company Hugging Face all have contracts with the big three hyperscalers.

Given this resource intensity, there will be significant pressure to leverage generative AI systems for profit. Here too, Big Tech companies are best positioned. They already operate digital ecosystems across which generative AI systems can be applied, and can maximise their dominance over platforms and markets.

OpenAI’s release of an app marketplace is an indicator that it intends to operate from the same playbook, by offering a product and operating a marketplace in which to compete with other companies. Amazon’s launch of its generative AI cloud service Bedrock is also a case in point: Amazon will both offer its own Titan generative AI models and operate a platform, tied to Amazon Web Services, on which companies can access other generative AI services. This structure means Amazon is well placed to secure its dominant position in the cloud computing market.

If anti-competitive conduct by Big Tech companies was a problem in the past, the introduction of generative AI is set to make things far worse.

That is why we need early and sure-footed enforcement of competition law to shape the direction of generative AI. This is an opportune moment for intervention: there is already a push for more muscular enforcement of the laws to address the concentration of power in Big Tech.

The US Federal Trade Commission has demonstrated an appetite for early intervention through its challenge to Meta’s takeover of the VR studio Within, indicating that it will be more aggressive in targeting future harms to competition before they materialise.

FTC chair Lina Khan has expressed concern about the lack of competition in AI, noting that in transitional moments like this one, incumbent companies often “panic” and attempt to block new entrants through unlawful tactics to protect their dominance. Support for this stance is reinforced by the White House, through its executive order outlining its intention of curbing industry consolidation.

Intervention is needed on several fronts. For one, companies must be held accountable for attempting to stave off competition — starting with Microsoft’s recent move to limit access to data for competitor chatbot-search engines. The resource dependencies in AI must also be addressed: regulators in the UK, Japan, the Netherlands, France and most recently the US have all identified concerns with the concentration in the cloud market. The emerging consensus among regulators about the dangers of cloud monopolies should galvanise structural interventions that anticipate future attempts at consolidation by these companies.

Generative AI could irreversibly cement the Big Tech advantage. But concentration in the tech industry emerged partly because lax regulators missed many opportunities to intervene. This time around, we should learn from past mistakes and act before the market is cornered. It’s now regulators, not companies, who need to move fast and break things up.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

内塔尼亚胡的对手在伊朗问题上争相“比强硬”

以色列反对党即便强烈支持进攻行动,仍批评总理对战争的管理。

伊朗战争重新唤起对全球通胀的担忧

美国联邦储备系统、欧洲央行和英格兰银行将于本周就该冲突带来的威胁公布首次正式评估。

自由民主党呼吁打造“真正”独立的英国核威慑力量

随着民调落后、党内不满情绪加剧,自由民主党领导人埃德•戴维正试图争取“温和”保守党选民的支持。

美联储将如何应对伊朗战争的后续影响?

欧洲央行现在仍然处于“有利位置”吗?通胀预期会迫使英格兰银行出手吗?

“AI先生”彼得•蒂尔在罗马讨论“敌基督”

一系列闭门活动将挑战美国籍教宗利奥十四世的信念,而他此前曾警示人工智能的风险。

特朗普的“震撼与战争”使这场经济危机不同以往

与伊朗的冲突将比去年的关税危机留下更深、更持久的伤痕。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×