OpenAI Is Becoming a Shopping Mall, and I'm Not Sure How to Feel About It
The company that promised to save humanity is now helping you buy groceries and browse Target. What happened?
Image credit: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
OpenAI just announced partnerships with Instacart and Target to turn ChatGPT into a shopping assistant with built-in checkout. You can now ask the AI for dinner ideas and have ingredients in your cart before you finish the conversation.
I initially thought this was just another corporate partnership announcement, the kind you skim and forget. But after reading through the details, I think something bigger is happening here. OpenAI is pivoting from "AI safety research lab" to "AI-powered commerce platform," and the speed of this transformation is honestly kind of jarring.
The Shopping Spree
Let's start with what's actually launching. The Instacart partnership brings a fully integrated grocery shopping app directly into ChatGPT, complete with something called "Instant Checkout." You don't leave the chat. You don't open another app. You ask for meal suggestions, get a shopping list, and pay. All in one window.
The Target deal follows the same playbook. Personalized shopping recommendations, faster checkout, the whole thing embedded in your ChatGPT conversation. Target is also expanding its use of ChatGPT Enterprise internally, which, fine, that's standard corporate AI adoption stuff.
But here's what caught my attention: these aren't just API integrations. These are "apps" living inside ChatGPT. OpenAI is building a platform where third parties can set up shop. Sound familiar? It should. It's the App Store model, except instead of downloading apps, you just... ask for them.
And then there's the advertising.
OpenAI recently announced they're testing ads in ChatGPT for free and lower-tier users. They've built a self-serve Ads Manager. They're doing CPC bidding. They promise ads will be "separate from conversations" and privacy-protecting, but honestly, I'm not sure how that works in practice when the whole point of ChatGPT is that it knows what you're thinking about.
The Business Model Question
You might be wondering why this matters. OpenAI needs money, right? They're burning through billions on compute. Subscriptions alone probably can't cover it. So commerce and ads make sense.
I get that. But there's something uncomfortable about watching a company that positioned itself as humanity's best hope against AI existential risk turn into, well, a shopping concierge with an ad business.
The Apple partnership from last year made sense to me. Integration into iOS, Siri improvements, that felt like expanding access to AI tools. The was about training data and content, which, okay, at least that's still about making the AI better.
Sources
- Instacart and OpenAI partner on AI shopping experiences· OpenAI Blog
- OpenAI and Target team up on new AI-powered experiences· OpenAI Blog
- OpenAI and Apple announce partnership· OpenAI Blog
- OpenAI and Reddit Partnership · OpenAI Blog
- New ways to buy ChatGPT ads· OpenAI Blog
- Our approach to advertising and expanding access to ChatGPT· OpenAI Blog
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