
A high-stakes rift has emerged between the world’s most powerful AI alliance as Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) considers litigation against OpenAI and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).
According to a report from the Financial Times on Wednesday, the dispute centers on a multibillion-dollar deal that positioned Amazon Web Services (AWS) as the "exclusive third-party cloud provider" for Frontier, OpenAI's new enterprise platform for autonomous AI agents.
Microsoft executives contend that the move directly breaches the terms of their multi-year partnership, which established Azure as the exclusive cloud host for OpenAI’s groundbreaking models.
The conflict highlights the growing tension between OpenAI’s desire for commercial independence and Microsoft’s need to protect its $13 billion investment.
While Microsoft and OpenAI signed updated relationship terms in late 2025—allowing OpenAI to pursue deals with entities like SoftBank and Nvidia—Microsoft maintains that its "exclusive license and access to intellectual property" remains tethered to Azure.
Sources familiar with Microsoft’s position suggest that offering Frontier via AWS violates the spirit, if not the literal phrasing, of their existing contracts.