The Surprising Deal Between Microsoft and OpenAI
In a move that could reshape the balance of power in artificial intelligence, Microsoft and OpenAI have signed a new non-binding agreement that redefines their multi-billion-dollar partnership and the very structure of OpenAI itself.
The deal sets OpenAI’s commercial arm on course to become a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC) — a for-profit entity that still carries a legal obligation to consider the public good. For Microsoft, it cements its role as OpenAI’s closest ally, while also exposing subtle signs of competition between the two tech giants.
Sam Altman, OpenAI’s CEO, emphasized that despite the structural shake-up, the nonprofit remains firmly in control
“OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, continues today as a nonprofit that oversees the for-profit arm, and will remain guided by that structure going forward.”
That means OpenAI will not abandon its profit engine but will continue operating under a governance model designed to safeguard its mission. For a sector where power shifts every quarter, the Microsoft–OpenAI alliance is proving remarkably adaptive.
The plan is not without hurdles. Because OpenAI is headquartered in San Francisco but incorporated in Delaware, converting into a PBC will require approvals from attorneys general in both states. The company aims to complete the transition before the end of 2025 — a timeline critical to securing billions in fresh investment. Any delay could cost OpenAI dearly, both in capital and credibility.
The PBC framework allows OpenAI to scale commercially without abandoning its original mission of responsible AI. Bret Taylor, chair of the OpenAI board, explained:
“The planned evolution of OpenAI will see the current nonprofit control a Public Benefit Corporation and directly share its success.”
To underline this dual purpose, OpenAI has launched a $50 million fund to back AI literacy programs, community-led innovation, and equitable access to technology. It’s a clear signal that OpenAI intends to show regulators and the public that AI can drive more than just shareholder value.
Perhaps the most telling element of this new phase is OpenAI’s effort to reduce dependence on Microsoft. The company recently inked a $300 billion data center deal with Oracle and announced a significant new partnership with Google Cloud.
The strategy makes sense: diversifying infrastructure not only provides resilience and bargaining power but also projects independence at a time when regulators are increasingly wary of big tech monopolies.
Partners & Rivals
The scale of OpenAI’s ambitions is staggering. The company is targeting a $300 billion valuation, with revenues projected at $12.7 billion in 2025. Its nonprofit parent is positioned to retain control of assets worth more than $100 billion.
On the product side, ChatGPT continues to dominate AI traffic worldwide, while OpenAI is already eyeing new markets with projects like an AI-powered LinkedIn-style platform and a potential AI web browser that could directly challenge Google’s search supremacy.
This deal reinforces Microsoft’s position as OpenAI’s closest partner, with the tech giant embedding OpenAI models across its ecosystem — from Office to GitHub Copilot. Yet OpenAI’s simultaneous expansion to Oracle and Google Cloud hints at an undercurrent of strategic caution.
The partnership ties the fortunes of both companies together, but OpenAI’s diversification reveals a subtle tension: cooperation remains strong, but complete trust is far from guaranteed.