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구글, CharacterAI 인력 흡수에 30억 달러 지급

조회 수 175 추천 수 0 2024.08.10 07:19:45


Noam Shazeer and Daniel De Freitas standing next to each other behind an office’s open sliding glass door.

 

CharacterAI의 공동창업자인 노암 샤지어(Noam Shazeer)와 다니엘 디 프레이타스(Daniel De Freitas)가 다시 구글로 돌아갔습니다. 뉴욕타임스에 구체적인 조건이 공개됐습니다. 회사 인력의 20%가 같이 이동한다고 합니다. 대신 기술 라이선스로 구글이 30억 달러를 지급하기로 했습니다. 이는 2006년 유튜브 인수가격인 16억 5천만달러보다 높은 금액입니다.

 

30억 달러 중 25억 달러는 기존 주주들의 지분을 정리하는데 사용했습니다. 지난 투자 라운드에서 10억 달러 기업가치로 1억 5천만달러를 조달했습니다. 이번 구글과의 거래로 창업자와 투자자는 큰 수익을 얻게 되었습니다.

 

과연 창업자와 핵심 인력들이 떠난 CharacterAI의 미래는 어떻게 될까요. 아직 사용자들에게 큰 인기를 얻고 있는 서비스인 만큼 그냥 포기하진 않을 텐데요. 메타나 구글도 AI Companion 분야에 속속 뛰어들고 있기도 하고요.

 

 

 

< 뉴욕타임즈 기사 >

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/08/technology/ai-start-ups-google-microsoft-amazon.html

 

 

The New A.I. Deal: Buy Everything but the Company

 

Google, Microsoft and Amazon have made deals with A.I. start-ups for their technology and top employees, but have shied from owning the firms. Here’s why.

 

In 2022, Noam Shazeer and Daniel De Freitas left their jobs developing artificial intelligence at Google. They said the tech giant moved too slowly. So they created Character.AI, a chatbot start-up, and raised nearly $200 million.

 

Last week, Mr. Shazeer and Mr. De Freitas announced that they were returning to Google. They had struck a deal to rejoin its A.I. research arm, along with roughly 20 percent of Character.AI’s employees, and provide their start-up’s technology, they said.

 

But even though Google was getting all that, it was not buying Character.AI.

Instead, Google agreed to pay $3 billion to license the technology, two people with knowledge of the deal said. About $2.5 billion of that sum will then be used to buy out Character.AI’s shareholders, including Mr. Shazeer, who owns 30 percent to 40 percent of the company and stands to net $750 million to $1 billion, the people said. What remains of Character.AI will continue operating without its founders and investors.

 

The deal was one of several unusual transactions that have recently emerged in Silicon Valley. While big tech companies typically buy start-ups outright, they have turned to a more complicated deal structure for young A.I. companies. It involves licensing the technology and hiring the top employees — effectively swallowing the start-up and its main assets — without becoming the owner of the firm.

 

These transactions are being driven by the big tech companies’ desire to sidestep regulatory scrutiny while trying to get ahead in A.I., said three people who have been involved in such agreements. Google, Amazon, Meta, Apple and Microsoft are under a magnifying glass from agencies like the Federal Trade Commission over whether they are squashing competition, including by buying start-ups.

 

“Large tech firms may clearly be trying to avoid regulatory scrutiny by not directly acquiring the targeted firms,” said Justin Johnson, a business economist who focuses on antitrust at Cornell University. But “these deals do indeed start to look a lot like regular acquisitions.”

 

In a statement, Google said it was “thrilled” that Mr. Shazeer was returning alongside some of his colleagues and declined to comment on antitrust scrutiny. On Monday, a federal judge issued a landmark ruling that found Google had violated antitrust law by abusing a monopoly in online search.

 

A Character.AI spokeswoman declined to comment beyond the announcement of the Google deal. The Information earlier reported on the deal’s details.

 

Since the A.I. boom took off in late 2022, it has transformed tech deals. Investors initially raced to pour money into A.I. start-ups at high valuations. That led to an unusually frenzied pace, with start-ups such as Anthropic raising large sums frequently and agreeing to various funding conditions, such as using chips and cloud computing services from the companies that invested in them.

 

That excitement cooled as it became clear that some high-profile A.I. start-ups would not succeed, creating an opportunity for big tech companies to swoop in with nontraditional deals.

 

Microsoft kicked off the trend in March when it agreed to pay the A.I. start-up Inflection more than $650 million to license its technology and hire almost all of its employees, including its founder, Mustafa Suleyman. Mr. Suleyman, an A.I. veteran, now leads Microsoft’s consumer A.I. business.

 

In June, Amazon inked a similar deal with the A.I. start-up Adept, bringing on many of its employees, including its founder, David Luan.

 

About half a dozen people, some of them blurry, walk through a lighted passageway.Microsoft’s annual developer conference in May. In March, the company struck a $650 million deal with the chatbot start-up Inflection, but did not buy the company.Credit...Grant Hindsley for The New York Times

 

Amazon paid Adept at least $330 million to license its technology, with much of the money going toward paying back the $414 million that the start-up had raised from investors, three people with knowledge of the transaction said. Amazon also offered a $100 million retention bonus to Adept employees who joined, the people said.

 

Regulators are watching. The F.T.C. is working on a broad study of A.I. deals between start-ups and Microsoft, Amazon and Google, the agency said in January. It is also investigating whether Microsoft should have notified regulators about the Inflection deal, which would have subjected the arrangement to more immediate scrutiny, a person with knowledge of the matter said.

 

On Thursday, Britain’s antitrust regulator said it was investigating an investment deal that Amazon had made with Anthropic.

 

Silicon Valley has embraced the unusual deals because start-up founders can continue working on their technology with the resources of a large company, without worrying about making money on their own.

 

The transactions can also provide a fast return for investors. Investors in Character.AI, which was privately valued at $1 billion, made a two-and-a-half-times return from the Google licensing deal after just two years. With the Adept and Inflection deals, most investors got their money back, people familiar with the transactions said.

 

Yet the transactions have also left behind orphaned corporate entities, stranding remaining employees at start-ups where the founders and investors have moved on. Those employees do not get to partake in the financial spoils of these deals.

 

That has caused consternation among some tech investors and entrepreneurs.

“If you build a company and you take on money from investors, every person involved deserves to be rewarded,” said Sebastian Thrun, an A.I. researcher and serial entrepreneur known for founding Google’s self-driving car project. “This is why Silicon Valley emerged. If you water things down, it will be hard for the ecosystem to survive.”

 

Matt Turck, an investor at the venture firm FirstMark Capital, said he hoped these types of deals would not continue because they created “a messy structure that breaks down the alignment” of founders, employees and investors.

 

It is unclear how the left-behind companies will fare. At Character.AI, Dominic Perella, the general counsel, has become the interim chief executive. The start-up has said it is “committed to serving our users through innovative new products.”

 

At Adept, teams working on product, sales and other areas did not join Amazon, a person familiar with the agreement said. Amazon hired only the researchers who built Adept’s A.I. technology. The start-up’s former head of engineering, Zach Brock, has since taken over as chief executive, and the company is trying to license its technology to other firms, according to a recent pitch sent to prospective partners that was viewed by The New York Times.

 

Inflection has also hired a new chief executive, but just two employees stayed on while the rest — roughly 70 people — joined Microsoft. Inflection used the $650 million licensing fee from Microsoft to reimburse its investors, who had poured $1.5 billion into the company.

 

More of these deals may surface. Many A.I. start-ups have raised huge sums on wildly ambitious goals, and large acquirers remain eager to pay for the best talent, ideas and products. At the same time, some of the start-ups are struggling to make money and to compete with the bigger players, so they may be more willing to entertain deal talks.

 

“Founders and investors realize that not every high-profile A.I. start-up with great founders is going to be the next OpenAI or Google,” Mr. Turck said.

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