Anthropic Reportedly Agrees To Pay Google $200 Billion For Chips And Cloud Access






We learned earlier this month that Google and Anthropic had inked a deal that would grant the creator of the Claude AI models access to cloud servers and chips. Today, The Information reported that Anthropic has agreed to pay a staggering $200 billion to Google over the next five years.

Contracts like this, or Anthropic’s other recent multi-billion dollar arrangement with Amazon, now account for a ludicrous amount of money promised to some of the world’s largest tech companies. The Information claims that deals with Anthropic and OpenAI are responsible for a revenue backlog of $2 trillion across Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Oracle. These cloud service providers have been early investors in the AI boom, gambling that the startups’ need for their resources as they grow would yield lucrative dividends. So far, they’ve been correct. Previous projections estimated that server costs in 2026 could reach $45 billion for OpenAI and $20 billion for Anthropic. 

Similar moves have also happened at chipmakers like NVIDIA, which has made its own investments into OpenAI. These expensive circular deals are part of what’s driving the current AI boom, but they aren’t exactly a sustainable business practice. Data centers put a strain on limited resources and RAM shortages aren’t expected to stop bringing prices up and sales down for related gadgets any time soon.





Source link

  • Related Posts

    Character.AI sued over chatbot that claims to be a real doctor with a license

    Pennsylvania has sued the maker of Character.AI, alleging that it violated state law by presenting an AI chatbot character as a licensed doctor. The lawsuit was filed in a state…

    The iPhone That Never Was

    Imagine a tech company so visionary that it can take an idea public. A “concept IPO,” they called it. Picture the three founders, all former Apple employees, two of whom—software…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Remedy says Control has now sold over 6 million lifetime copies and reaffirms Control Resonant is still “on track” for a 2026 release

    Remedy says Control has now sold over 6 million lifetime copies and reaffirms Control Resonant is still “on track” for a 2026 release

    Steve Kornacki breaks down primary races in Ohio, Indiana

    Steve Kornacki breaks down primary races in Ohio, Indiana

    Character.AI sued over chatbot that claims to be a real doctor with a license

    Character.AI sued over chatbot that claims to be a real doctor with a license

    Why Does The US Navy Still Rely On The F/A-18 Super Hornet?

    Why Does The US Navy Still Rely On The F/A-18 Super Hornet?

    Rachel Sennott Debuts Marc Jacobs Beauty Preview at 2026 Met Gala

    Rachel Sennott Debuts Marc Jacobs Beauty Preview at 2026 Met Gala

    Hormuz standoff deepens despite U.S. declaring end of offensive