REUTERS

STARTUP Character.AI has signed an agreement with Alphabet’s Google that grants the search engine giant a nonexclusive license to the chatbot maker’s large language model technology.

The deal, echoing ones struck by Microsoft and Amazon in the past few months, will see Character.AI co-founders Noam Shazeer and Daniel De Freitas rejoin Google, where they were formerly employees.

Those other deals are being scrutinized by regulators, reflecting a growing concern in both the US and Europe about how artificial intelligence (AI) deals are put together by tech giants who are funneling billions into bolstering their AI infrastructure and hiring the best researchers from startups.

Character.AI will get more funding as part of the deal with Google, the startup said in a blog, without disclosing the amount. Dominic Perella, Character.AI’s general counsel, will become its interim chief executive officer effective immediately.

“We’re particularly thrilled to welcome back Noam, a preeminent researcher in machine learning, who is joining Google DeepMind’s research team, along with a small number of his colleagues,” a Google spokesperson said in an e-mail.

In March, Microsoft paid $650 million to bring on the cofounders and dozens of staff from AI startup Inflection. In June, Amazon hired several cofounders and employees from Adept, another AI startup.

Character.AI earlier raised $193 million in venture capital from investors including Andreessen Horowitz. It was in talks to raise hundreds of millions of dollars from Google, Reuters reported in November.

Inflection and Adept raised $1.3 billion and $415 million, respectively.

Law firm Sullivan & Cromwell advised Character.AI on the deal. — Reuters