OpenAI's $122 Billion Raise Has Me Asking Questions Nobody Wants to Answer
The numbers are staggering, but after 30 years in this industry, I've learned that big funding rounds don't always mean what the press releases say they mean.
Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
OpenAI just closed a $122 billion funding round. That's billion with a B. For context, that's roughly what the entire global industrial robotics market was worth a few years back.
I'll be honest, when I first saw the headline I thought it was a typo.
What exactly is all this money for?
According to OpenAI's announcement, the cash is meant to "expand frontier AI globally, invest in next-generation compute, and meet growing demand" for their products. Fair enough. Running large language models isn't cheap. When I was at Kuka, we thought our compute bills for simulation work were eye-watering. We had no idea.
They've also announced a separate partnership with AWS worth $38 billion for infrastructure and compute capacity. So we're talking about $160 billion in committed capital between the two deals. That's a lot of GPUs.
But here's the thing. OpenAI started as a non-profit with the explicit goal of being "free from financial obligations" so they could "better focus on a positive human impact." Now they're raising more money than most countries' GDP. I'm not saying that's wrong, necessarily. I'm saying the transformation is worth noting.
Is this actually about robotics?
Not directly, no. OpenAI's focus remains on language models, coding assistants, and enterprise AI. But anyone who's been paying attention knows that the line between AI companies and robotics companies is getting blurry.
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