I didn't notice that line, but my immediate thought on reading the memo was that they were going hard after European capital. Seemingly both governmental and from VC firms in Europe that are well-connected to the traditional establishment.
(Even if they don't get government funding, it looks like they've already positioned themselves to get a ton of support from the EU and from European national governments, who want local champions to compete with the American capitalists.)
My thoughts:
- it's a fairly well-written memo: clear, concise, and relatively well-structured. It's a refreshing alternative to the endless series of pitch decks which mainly induce groupthink.
- the insights aren't that original. I would guess that they are strongest on the technical level. Their product and industry insights are less original or penetrating (pushing open-source and the European angle may give them some advantages -- it almost certainly will not give them an edge over OpenAI, who seem to have a relentless focus on iterating their product, a "live player" CEO in sama, and a strong dose of healthy scrappiness and creativity.)
- my prediction: they will stick around for a time, build something impressive with their technical team, raise more funding, hire a large and strong technical team (with their enormous warchest, status as the European champion, and appeal to the open-source community), and basically become a solid "fast follower". However, I think it's less certain whether they'll be able to do anything really creative or innovative.
Their overwhelmingly strongest market is going to be large European enterprises (or maybe governments), who will have lots of specific niche problems. The downside of that is their org then moulds itself to fit the needs of enterprise customers.
More speculative: the only way they can really become dangerous will be by attracting a bunch of young top-notch 18-25-year-old devs, ML people, or other builders (basically, people with creative energy and without commitment to the "established ways of doing things"), throwing them in a room together, and giving them a remit to come up with the most crazy, ambitious, unexpected applications of AI that they can. A universal translation app customised for the needs of ERASMUS students. Some weird generative music app for Berlin nightclubs. The actual ideas don't matter, what matters is having 50-100 hyperactive GenZ builders energetically exploring the space of combinations of technology, product and market to identify the genuinely novel applications of AI.
But I predict that they will not do that. You cannot cultivate that kind of free-spirited entrepreneurial DNA while simultaneously seeking deep connections with the European political establishment.
So, my overall prediction: they will focus on the underlying technology and on connections with governments/large enterprises, and deemphasise product innovation. Basically, building an AI-powered French IBM, rather than Google+++++. (Google+++++ will be built by one or two lone young researchers following their noses and working on weird esoteric ideas.) If I am right, and product innovation is the key to harnessing the power of generative models, then these guys in Paris will be formidable but not dangerous.
"We will distribute tools to leverage the power of these
white box models, and create a developer community around our trademark. This
approach is an ideological differentiator from OpenAI; it is a very strong point
argument for hiring highly coveted top researchers, and a strong accelerator
for development, as it will open the doors for many downstream applications from
motivated hackers."
So they're trying to build a community of inventive 3rd party developers, however:
"Business development will start in parallel to the first model family development, using the
following strategy
- Focus on exploring needs with a large industrial actors, accompanied by third-party
integrators that will be given full access to our best (non-open source) model"
Suggests they be will sucked into the enterprise market as I said above. Still, the last line:
"Co-design of products with a few small emerging partners that focuses on
generative-AI products."
Suggests a wildcard: one of these "small emerging partners" might come up with the $trillion black-swan application of AI.
[I'm going to bookmark this comment and reread it 2 years from now to see how wrong I was]
(Even if they don't get government funding, it looks like they've already positioned themselves to get a ton of support from the EU and from European national governments, who want local champions to compete with the American capitalists.)
My thoughts:
- it's a fairly well-written memo: clear, concise, and relatively well-structured. It's a refreshing alternative to the endless series of pitch decks which mainly induce groupthink.
- the insights aren't that original. I would guess that they are strongest on the technical level. Their product and industry insights are less original or penetrating (pushing open-source and the European angle may give them some advantages -- it almost certainly will not give them an edge over OpenAI, who seem to have a relentless focus on iterating their product, a "live player" CEO in sama, and a strong dose of healthy scrappiness and creativity.)
- my prediction: they will stick around for a time, build something impressive with their technical team, raise more funding, hire a large and strong technical team (with their enormous warchest, status as the European champion, and appeal to the open-source community), and basically become a solid "fast follower". However, I think it's less certain whether they'll be able to do anything really creative or innovative.
Their overwhelmingly strongest market is going to be large European enterprises (or maybe governments), who will have lots of specific niche problems. The downside of that is their org then moulds itself to fit the needs of enterprise customers.
More speculative: the only way they can really become dangerous will be by attracting a bunch of young top-notch 18-25-year-old devs, ML people, or other builders (basically, people with creative energy and without commitment to the "established ways of doing things"), throwing them in a room together, and giving them a remit to come up with the most crazy, ambitious, unexpected applications of AI that they can. A universal translation app customised for the needs of ERASMUS students. Some weird generative music app for Berlin nightclubs. The actual ideas don't matter, what matters is having 50-100 hyperactive GenZ builders energetically exploring the space of combinations of technology, product and market to identify the genuinely novel applications of AI.
But I predict that they will not do that. You cannot cultivate that kind of free-spirited entrepreneurial DNA while simultaneously seeking deep connections with the European political establishment.
So, my overall prediction: they will focus on the underlying technology and on connections with governments/large enterprises, and deemphasise product innovation. Basically, building an AI-powered French IBM, rather than Google+++++. (Google+++++ will be built by one or two lone young researchers following their noses and working on weird esoteric ideas.) If I am right, and product innovation is the key to harnessing the power of generative models, then these guys in Paris will be formidable but not dangerous.
Should be interesting to watch it play out!