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Home / Business

OpenAI says it raised US$40b at valuation of US$300b

AFP
1 Apr, 2025 08:32 PM3 mins to read

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OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman (centre), with social media influencer Jake Paul (left) and wrestler Logan Paul at Donald Trump's inauguration as President. Photo / Getty Images

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman (centre), with social media influencer Jake Paul (left) and wrestler Logan Paul at Donald Trump's inauguration as President. Photo / Getty Images

OpenAI on Monday said it raised US$40 billion ($70b) in a new funding round that valued the ChatGPT maker at US$300b, the biggest capital-raising session ever for a startup.

The infusion of cash comes in a partnership with Japanese investment giant SoftBank Group and “enables us to push the frontiers of AI research even further”, the San Francisco-based company said in a post on its website.

“Their support will help us continue building AI systems that drive scientific discovery, enable personalised education, enhance human creativity, and pave the way toward AGI [artificial general intelligence] that benefits all of humanity,” the company said.

AGI refers to a computing platform with human-level intelligence.

SoftBank said in a release that it is on a mission to realise Artificial Super Intelligence (ASI) that surpasses human intelligence, and that OpenAI is the partner closest to achieving that goal.

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“The advancement of OpenAI’s AI models is key to achieving AGI and ASI, and massive computing power is essential,” SoftBank stated in its rationale for the latest investment in the company.

SoftBank is to pump US$10 billion into OpenAI to start, and US$30b more by the end of this year pending certain conditions.

OpenAI plans to scale its infrastructure and “deliver increasingly powerful tools for the 500 million people who use ChatGPT every week”.

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The funding news came the same day OpenAI announced it was building a more open generative AI model as it faces growing competition in the open-source space from Chinese rival DeepSeek, and Meta.

The move would mark a strategic shift by OpenAI, which until now has been a fierce defender of closed, proprietary models that do not allow developers to modify the basic technology to make AI more adapted to their goals.

OpenAI and defenders of closed models – which include Google – have often decried open models as riskier and more vulnerable to nefarious uses by malicious actors or non-US governments.

OpenAI’s embrace of closed models has also been a bone of contention in its battles with former investor Elon Musk, the world’s wealthiest person, who has called on OpenAI to honour the spirit of the company’s name and “return to the open-source, safety-focused force for good it once was”.

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Putting pressure on OpenAI, many large companies and governments have proved reluctant to build their AI products or services on models they have no control over, especially when data security is a concern.

The core selling point of Meta’s family of Llama models or DeepSeek’s models is addressing these worries by letting companies download their models, and have far greater control to modify the technology for their own purposes and keep control of their data.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said earlier this month that Llama hit one billion downloads, while the release of DeepSeek’s lower-cost R1 model in January rocked the world of artificial intelligence.

“We’ve been thinking about this for a long time, but other priorities took precedence. Now it feels important to do,” OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman said on X of the decision to build a more open model.

OpenAI has been riding on the success of its latest image-generation features in ChatGPT, the world-leading AI app and chatbot.

Altman posted on Monday that the tool helped add “one million users” in one hour.

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That claim came days after Altman said the new image features were so popular that they were melting the OpenAI graphics processing units that power the AI due to heavy use.

- Agence France-Presse

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