Google, AI and hackers
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Anthropic said its latest agreement with Google expands on a longstanding partnership between the two companies.
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Anthropic commits to spending $200 billion on Google's cloud and chips, The Information reports
May 5 (Reuters) - Anthropic has committed to spend $200 billion with Google Cloud over five years as part of a recent agreement, The Information reported on Tuesday, citing a person with knowledge of the matter.
Google is preparing an investment in Anthropic worth up to $40B, pairing cash with cloud capacity as demand for Claude fuels the latest major AI megadeal.
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.
Google said Monday that it had disrupted a criminal group’s attempt to use artificial intelligence to exploit another company’s previously unknown digital vulnerability, adding to heightened worries across government and private industry about
Google-parent Alphabet GOOGL.O will invest up to $40 billion in Anthropic, as the tech giant deepens its partnership with the artificial intelligence startup that is also its rival in the global AI race. Anthropic said on Friday that Google has ...
Alphabet appears to be getting a spectacular deal on Anthropic shares.
Google Cloud executives in AI, global security, partner programs and customer engineering leave in 2026 for Anthropic, OpenAI, Microsoft and CrowdStrike.
Anthropic bulked up its compute deal with Google and Broadcom as the company has seen its run-rate revenue surge to $30 billion.
When Google last month said it would supply Anthropic with an astonishing five gigawatts of server capacity, the companies didn’t put a dollar figure on that commitment. But as part of the deal, which begins next year,
As frontier AI labs move beyond selling models and APIs and deepen their relationships with private equity giants, Indian IT firms face a new competitive threat.