The substantial investment led by SoftBank marks a significant milestone in the tech industry's ongoing AI race.
OpenAI has successfully raised over $40 billion in a new funding round, leading to a valuation of $300 billion for the AI firm, known for its development of ChatGPT.
This funding round is regarded as one of the largest ever secured by a start-up.
The investment initiative has been spearheaded by SoftBank, a Japanese investment group, which will allocate an initial $10 billion, with a potential additional $30 billion contingent on meeting specific criteria by the end of 2025.
In an official blog post, OpenAI highlighted that this injection of capital would enhance its ability to further advance AI research.
The firm expressed intentions to utilize the funding to scale its computational infrastructure and create more powerful tools for ChatGPT users.
OpenAI reported that it currently serves 500 million users of ChatGPT each week.
The company expressed enthusiasm regarding its partnership with SoftBank, emphasizing their understanding of scaling transformative technologies.
OpenAI noted, "Their support will help us continue building AI systems that drive scientific discovery, enable personalized education, enhance human creativity, and pave the way toward AGI (artificial general intelligence) that benefits all of humanity."
The surge in interest and investment in artificial intelligence was significantly catalyzed by the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, igniting a competitive environment among leading technology companies to develop and integrate generative AI tools into their products.
Major technology firms such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta have since introduced their own generative AI capabilities.
OpenAI, which began as a non-profit organization with a focus on creating open-source AI models, is currently transitioning to a for-profit structure.
This restructuring has resulted in legal disputes with co-founder
Elon Musk, who departed the company in 2018 and is now at the helm of rival start-up xAI.
Musk has advocated for OpenAI to revert to its open-source foundation rather than continuing with proprietary models, arguing that open-source models can be customized by companies while closed systems may pose risks of misuse.
Despite the criticisms, OpenAI announced its plans to create a more open generative AI model amid escalating competition within the sector.
This comes as open-source initiatives from companies such as Meta and the Chinese firm DeepSeek are gaining traction.
DeepSeek created waves in the tech industry earlier in the year when it introduced its low-cost R1 model, which reportedly rivals the performance of ChatGPT despite its lower development costs.
In a related note, Meta's CEO
Mark Zuckerberg recently announced that their Llama AI models have surpassed one billion downloads.
The recent funding round for OpenAI arrives amid concerns about the evolving competitive landscape in artificial intelligence.
Reports indicate that 75% of the investment will be provided by SoftBank, while the remaining 25% will come from a consortium of investors, including longstanding partner Microsoft.