April 22, 2025

OpenAI sought Anysphere deal before turning its sights on WindSurf

2 min read

OpenAI was reportedly in talks to buy Anysphere, the company that produces the Cursor AI coding assistant, before entering into talks with rival company WindSurf. According to CNBC , OpenAI approached Anysphere in 2024 and again in 2025, but talks stalled both times. Failing to arrive at a deal led OpenAI to look elsewhere for potential acquisitions. Sources familiar with the deal also say OpenAI is prepared to pay $3 billion to purchase WindSurf, which would make it the company’s largest corporate acquisition to date. An example of OpenAI’s ChatGPT producing computer code through simple text prompts. Source: ChatGPT OpenAI’s attempted acquisition of an AI coding assistant company follows the release of DeepSeek R1 in January 2025, which shattered long-held assumptions about artificial intelligence. DeepSeek was reportedly trained at a fraction of the cost of leading AI models while delivering comparable performance — challenging the belief that scaling requires massive computing power, rattling financial markets , and raising questions about the billions spent by US AI giants. Related: OpenAI to release its first ‘open’ language model since GPT-2 in 2019 OpenAI inches toward profitability but cheaper competitors still a challenge OpenAI expects to triple its revenue in 2025 to approximately $12.7 billion by selling paid subscriptions for its leading AI models to individuals and businesses. The company surpassed 1 million premium business subscribers in September 2024. However, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the AI giant might not be profitable until 2029 . According to Altman, OpenAI needs revenues of approximately $125 billion to turn a profit on its capital-intensive business. In February 2025, Altman said that AI development costs were dropping dramatically . “The cost to use a given level of AI falls about 10x every 12 months,” the CEO wrote in a Feb. 9 blog post. Despite this, high costs and centralization issues continue to plague large-scale corporate AI developers, who must compete with more nimble open-source counterparts. Dr. Ala Shaabana — co-founder of the OpenTensor Foundation — recently told Cointelegraph that the release of DeepSeek solidified open-source AI as a serious contender against centralized AI systems. Shaabana added that the lower cost of open-source systems proves that AI does not need billions of dollars to scale or achieve high-performance benchmarks. Magazine: 9 curious things about DeepSeek R1: AI Eye

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