The reality of the AI ecosystem is perhaps more competitive and disruptive than these regulators realize, and government intervention via antitrust action could both prevent consumers from having access to beneficial innovations and further harm the small players it aims to protect.
When a new product emerges, there is often a single player who disrupts our existing paradigms of what we expect or changes the nature of the market. As a result, innovation sometimes leads to a “natural monopoly” for a first-of-its-kind company until competitors rise to consumers’ demands and catch up in the market. This is not a monopoly to worry about, and typically occurs only briefly before market forces lead competitors to respond.
We have seen this and heard these fears before when innovative technologies emerge. About two decades ago, headlines proclaimed that early internet companies were concerning monopolies that would never be caught. As ITIF’s Joe Coniglio tweeted, “Imagine saying this in 2000, when the Internet was what AI is today. You might have bet eBay Yahoo! and MySpace had it locked down.” But the reality was that competitors rapidly caught up. Ultimately, they won consumers not because the government intervened, but because of their own innovations.
Even at the top level, AI is still competitive, with new generative-AI platforms emerging. ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini both receive hundreds of millions of queries each month, while other consumers may be using slightly more specific generative-AI products — such as Dall‑E or Llama, which is now built into many of Meta’s products — to create images. As with many technologies, consumers may prefer a specific option because of its user interface or because they find the results better serve their needs.
These incredibly popular products, though, are only one type of AI product, and often rely on many other AI, machine-learning, or related products. The different elements involved in developing large language models and other AI products are not retained only by the largest players with popular consumer products but by firms of various sizes and goals. Many of these players are new and low-profile, but they may have a significant impact on the development of AI applications and the overall market.