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Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman says it will cost 'hundreds of billions' to keep up with frontier AI in the next decade

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Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman says it will cost 'hundreds of billions' to keep up with frontier AI in the next decade

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Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman says staying at the forefront of AI will cost "hundreds of billions" over the next five to 10 years. Inflection 2025-12-18T05:39:54.299Z Share Facebook Email X LinkedIn Reddit Bluesky WhatsApp Copy link lighning bolt icon An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt.

Impact Link Save Saved Read in app Add us on This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Have an account? Log in. Microsoft AI CEO says a huge price tag is needed for keeping up with frontier AI. "We're absolutely pushing for the frontier," Mustafa Suleyman said. His comments come as other tech leaders have spoken about the staggering cost of chasing AGI. Microsoft AI CEO says there's a huge price to pay for staying in the AI game. Mustafa Suleyman said in an episode of the "Moonshots with Peter Diamandis" podcast published Wednesday that it's going to cost "hundreds of billions of dollars" to compete at the frontier of AI over the next five to 10 years."Not to mention the prices that we're paying for individual researchers or members of technical staff," he added. Suleyman compared Microsoft to a "modern construction company," where hundreds of thousands of workers are building gigawatts of CPUs and AI accelerators.The scale of investment that is required is huge, and "clearly there's a structural advantage by being inside a big company," he said. Every time Lee Chong Ming publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox! Stay connected to Lee Chong Ming and get more of their work as it publishes. Sign up By clicking “Sign up”, you agree to receive emails from Business Insider. In addition, you accept Insider's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Microsoft, which has a market capitalization of $3.54 trillion, brought in $77.7 billion in revenue for the quarter ending in September, surpassing analysts' estimates.Suleyman said his mission is to make Microsoft "self-sufficient" in developing its frontier models and to build "an absolutely world-class superintelligence team." "We're absolutely pushing for the frontier," Suleyman said. "We want to build the best superintelligence and the safest superintelligence models in the world."Suleyman said last month that his team is "trying to build a humanist superintelligence" — one that is aligned with human interest. With the high cost required to keep up with AI, Suleyman said on the podcast that "it's hard to say" if startups could compete with Big Tech."The ambiguity is what's driving the frothiness of the valuations," he said. "If suddenly we do have an intelligence explosion, then lots of people can get there simultaneously." The high cost of AIMicrosoft is one of several tech giants chasing artificial general intelligence, or superintelligence, and executives across the industry have been blunt about how expensive that pursuit will be.Artificial general intelligence, or AGI, refers to AI systems that can match human intelligence across most tasks. Superintelligence goes a step further — systems that surpass human abilities. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in September he'd rather risk "misspending a couple of hundred billion" than fall behind in superintelligence.If superintelligence arrives earlier than expected and a company moves too slowly, it'll be "out of position on what I think is going to be the most important technology that enables the most new products and innovation and value creation and history," Zuckerberg said. Billions of dollars have also been poured into AI data centers. In recent months, Big Tech firms like Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Amazon have ramped up spending on cloud and compute infrastructure to train and run frontier models.

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