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Have we reached peak AI? This was a week in which CEO Jensen Huang’s Nvidia hit $3 trillion in market capitalization, only to fall back below that mark on reports of an antitrust probe by the Justice Department. Easy come, easy go.
Meantime, some people are questioning if generative AI will catch on quickly enough to justify all the money still flowing in, and policy arm-wrestling continues. But others such as McKinsey are more optimistic, and as Paul Gillin’s deep dive indicates, at least some companies are getting a handle on the all-important task of managing the data for AI.
Speaking of which, at its Data Cloud Summit this past week in San Francisco, Snowflake made its case for an integrated data compute platform while opening up to more outside technology. But archrival Databricks, which photobombed the event with an announced acquisition, will make its own case for even more openness next week at its Data + AI Summit.
Amid mixed enterprise tech provider earnings, HPE and CrowdStrike nonetheless beat estimates and investors cheered. Next week: Oracle and Broadcom, bellwethers in cloud — where Microsoft oddly laying off a lot of people from Azure — and in semiconductors. Plus Adobe, a software-as-a-service indicator.
Also next week, Apple holds its Worldwide Developer Conference, likely revealing its AI cards, in particular a deal with OpenAI as well as Apple Intelligence.
This weekend, don’t miss Dave Vellante’s weekly deep dive, Breaking Analysis, on top takeaways from Snowflake’s event and a look ahead to Databricks’ event next week.
Here’s the most important news from this week on SiliconANGLE and beyond:
Call it Jensanity: Nvidia’s market cap passes $3 trillion, passing Apple and now behind only Microsoft (for now).
Antitrust comes for AI giants: US regulators reportedly set stage for antitrust probes into Nvidia, Microsoft and OpenAI And down went AI stocks (for now).
A deep dive by Paul Gillin into how some companies are starting to manage all that data they need for doing AI: How some enterprises have licked the AI data problem
Another deep dive, a provocative (or maybe not so provocative) analysis by Tony Baer of how Nvidia has the lock-in of the classic IBM mainframe — and what that means for its future: Is Nvidia becoming the de facto AI mainframe?
New questions are emerging over how quickly generative AI will catch on, especially in enterprises. The AI revolution is already losing steam, contends the WSJ’s Christopher Mims, who notes that the pace of innovation in AI is slowing, its usefulness is limited, and the cost of running it remains exorbitant. MongoDB’s Matt Asay joins in, saying AI supply is way ahead of AI demand, though he thinks there are signs that enterprises are starting to put AI to work. Then there’s the regulators starting to get in gear, though if they slow down the big guys, that may be a positive for AI startups. McKinsey is even more optimistic, contending that gen AI adoption is spiking in early 2024 and is starting to generate value. Indeed, Baris Gultekin, head of AI at Snowflake, told me at the Snowflake summit that “2023 was the year of proof-of-concepts. Now is the year of implementation.” So it seems too early to be all that negative about the market, but the bottom line is that ROI matters, and that’s going to be a real factor as the AI rubber hits the road this year.
I had the opportunity this week to attend the fifth-anniversary celebration of the formation of Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, which drew a large number of AI luminaries analyzing key topics and issues today. I’ll dig deeper on these in coming weeks and months, but here are a few takeaways for now:
Arm wrestling in AI policy:
Mark Albertson’s close look at the AI boom’s impact on open source: How the open-source world is wrestling with security and licensing issues for generative AI
In public letter, former OpenAI researchers urge increased transparency on AI risks
Meta faces backlash in Europe over training AI with Facebook and Instagram data
At Snowflake’s Data Cloud Summit this past week in San Francisco, it was AI in everything everywhere all at once, with a clear focus on becoming the platform for building data apps. Our top news, interviews and analysis:
AI chip war heats up even more:
Mike Lynch found not guilty of criminal charges that he fooled Hewlett-Packard into buying Autonomy for $11B in 2011
LLM developer Cohere reportedly raises $450M at $5B valuation
GPU cloud provider CoreWeave bid $1 billion to acquire cryptomining and high-performance computing hosting firm Core Scientific, but Core on Thursday rejected the unsolicited proposal.
Cloudera acquires AI tooling startup Verta
Twelve Labs raises $50M for multimodal AI foundation models
Storyblok raises $80M to add AI content tools to its ‘headless’ CMS platform
Cube reels in $25M for its semantic layer platform for data
Tobiko Data raises $21.8M to transform data transformation
Report: Apple will integrate ChatGPT into iOS 18 as opt-in feature
AI accuracy startup Galileo’s new LLM family is designed to evaluate other LLMs
Stability AI debuts open version of its Stable Audio music generator tool
Zyphra debuts Zyda LLM training dataset with 1.3T tokens
Qlik debuts new data integration and curation tools for generative AI systems
Amazon’s Project P.I. uses generative AI to scan packages for defective products
Check out more of our AI news and big data news
News from Cisco Live:
Cisco advances intelligent networking and security as it announces $1B AI investment fund
Cisco Live Day 1 news brings together networking and security
I’m not sure how this computes given enterprises are still flocking to migrate to the cloud: Microsoft reportedly plans layoffs at Azure cloud division amid cost-cutting measures
And where that savings is going: Microsoft details $3.2B plan to expand its data center capacity in Sweden
Is CEO Pat Gelsinger taking some financial engineering tips from former boss Michael Dell? Intel gets $11B from Apollo for stake in its Fab 34 chipmaking plant in Ireland
And he’s not alone: NXP, chip foundry VIS to build $7.8B fab in Singapore
Study finds fears of post-Broadcom VMware customer flight may be overblown
Google acquires virtual app delivery platform Cameyo
SAP acquires application usability specialist WalkMe for $1.5B
HPE’s Aruba unit debuts platform for building private 5G networks And Zeus Kerravala’s analysis: HPE looks to speed up enterprise private cellular deployments with new Aruba Networking offering
Salesforce is transforming Slack into a collaborative project management tool
Check out the rest of our cloud news and infrastructure news
Tenable expands cloud data security capabilities with Eureka Security acquisition
SpyCloud raises $35M to bolster its cybersecurity efforts against account takeovers
Passwordless security company HYPR raises $30M to bolster defenses against AI security threats
Lots of criticism emerges on Microsoft’s recent introduction of Recall, which records everything you do on your PC — what could go wrong? A couple of sample views, one from Ars Technica: Windows Recall demands an extraordinary level of trust that Microsoft hasn’t earned and another from security researcher Kevin Beaumont: Stealing everything you’ve ever typed or viewed on your own Windows PC is now possible with two lines of code — inside the Copilot+ Recall disaster. On Friday, Microsoft switched gears: Microsoft makes Windows’ Recall feature opt-in following cybersecurity concerns
Major cyberattack causes chaos at London’s NHS hospitals
Hackers steal and offer for sale 3TB of data from Advance Auto Parts
Victims of LockBit ransomware urged to contact FBI for decryption assistance
Leaked database reveals unreported Google privacy breaches from 2013 to 2018
TikTok moves to block exploit after high-profile account takeovers
Immuta releases new multilayer data security architecture for RAG-based AI solutions
HackerOne launches partner program to leverage global ethical hacker community
New Darktrace managed service combines AI and expert analysis for advanced threat containment
AppSec platform Backslash unveils enterprise-grade security updates for its ‘reachability’ tools
Check out all the rest of our cybersecurity news
Robinhood agrees to acquire crypto exchange Bitstamp in global expansion effort
X updates policies to allow some sexually explicit content and AI-generated porn
As promised, new Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman made a raft of organizational changes — details at CRN.
Alphabet named Eli Lilly CFO Anat Ashkenazi to be its CFO starting July 31. She replaces Ruth Porat, who last year took on the additional roles of president and chief investment officer of Alphabet and its Google unit.
Google Chief Privacy Officer Keith Enright is leaving after 13 years, per Forbes. He won’t be replaced as Google restructures privacy and legal compliance teams. Matthew Bye, head of competition law, also will be leaving, after 15 years with Google.
June 10-13, San Francisco: Databricks’ Data + AI Summit TheCUBE will be there and so will I for SiliconANGLE.
June 10-14, virtual; livestream 10 a.m PDT Monday, June 10: Apple WWDC We’ll have all the news.
Tuesday, June 11: Oracle, Autodesk and Rubrik
Wednesday, June 12: Broadcom
Thursday, June 13: Adobe
THANK YOU