OpenAI-Codex Partnership: How Thyey Claim to Help Businesses Adopt AI Faster
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New Delhi, June 12: OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT and a major competitor to Anthropic's Claude AI, has announced a partnership with Oracle. It has announced a new partnership that will make it easier for businesses to access OpenAI's advanced AI models and coding tool, Codex, through Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). In the coming weeks, Oracle customers will be able to use eligible Oracle Universal Credits to access OpenAI's AI models and Codex. This means companies can use their existing Oracle cloud spending commitments instead of going through separate purchasing processes.
The partnership aims to help businesses adopt AI using the procurement systems and governance processes they already have in place.

With OpenAI's models, companies can build AI-powered applications, analyse large amounts of information, automate routine tasks, and improve services for customers and employees.
The companies said many organisations want to adopt AI but prefer to do so through technology platforms they already use and trust. By making OpenAI's tools available through OCI, businesses can bring AI into their operations more easily and with less administrative effort.
The move is expected to benefit companies that already use Oracle's cloud services, allowing them to align AI investments with their existing technology budgets and cloud commitments.
OpenAI and Oracle said the goal is to help more businesses move beyond experimenting with AI and start using it in day-to-day operations to improve productivity and efficiency.
The new offering is expected to become available to OCI customers, including those in India and other global markets, in the coming weeks.
OpenAI IPO
In another news, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI filed preliminary paperwork that would open the door to it becoming a publicly traded company, the third in a powerhouse trio of artificial intelligence companies racing to Wall Street debuts, said news agency PTI.
The San Francisco-based company said Monday it has filed confidential paperwork with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
"We expect it to leak so we're just announcing it," the company said in a written statement. "We have not decided on timing yet; it may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company. But it's a complicated set of tradeoffs and this gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best."


