OpenAI's government push isn't about robots, but it should worry robotics companies anyway
When the biggest AI company starts giving away its product to millions of federal workers, the rest of us need to pay attention to where this is heading.
Crédito de imagen: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Four million. That's roughly how many U.S. federal employees just got handed ChatGPT Enterprise for free. And if you're in the robotics business and think this doesn't concern you, I'd suggest you think again.
I'll be honest, when I first saw OpenAI's announcement about their GSA partnership, I almost scrolled past it. Government IT contracts aren't exactly my beat anymore. But then I started adding up all the pieces, and the picture that emerged got me thinking about where industrial automation is heading.
The numbers
Let's just list what OpenAI has done in the past few months. Free ChatGPT Plus for U.S. veterans transitioning to civilian life. Free access for verified physicians, nurse practitioners, and pharmacists. A custom deployment on GenAI.mil for defense teams. ChatGPT Enterprise for the entire federal executive branch. A deal with Deutsche Telekom covering millions of Europeans. UK data residency and a Ministry of Justice agreement.
This isn't a product launch. This is market capture.
When I was at Kuka, we used to joke that the best way to kill a competitor was to make your product free until they went broke trying to match you. We never actually did it (lawyers, mostly), but the logic was sound. OpenAI isn't going broke anytime soon, and they're playing a longer game than most of us are used to seeing.
So what
Here's the thing. Every one of those federal workers, those clinicians, those defense teams, they're going to get very comfortable with ChatGPT. They're going to build workflows around it. And when procurement decisions come up for systems that integrate AI (warehouse management, predictive maintenance, robotic control interfaces) guess whose ecosystem they'll already know?
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