The move turned one of the world’s largest media stages into a public battleground over competing visions for the future of AI.
At the center of the debate was OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who defended his company amid mounting scrutiny following rival campaigns that targeted OpenAI’s evolving business model.
Speaking about the growing attention surrounding OpenAI, Altman acknowledged the unusual pressure facing the company.
“It is a strange way to live,” Altman said Thursday (Feb. 5), according to a Friday (Feb. 6) CNBC report. “I don’t know of any private company that has ever been so in the news and so under a microscope, and at some level, it’s frustrating.”
His remarks came as AI competitors used Super Bowl advertising to shape public perception around issues such as monetization, privacy and trust.
Super Bowl commercials have historically been dominated by consumer brands such as automakers, telecom providers and beverage companies, making the prominence of AI firms this year notable.
OpenAI rival Anthropic aired ads emphasizing an ad-free approach to AI, indirectly criticizing OpenAI’s reported plans to test advertising within ChatGPT. The campaign positioned privacy and user experience as competitive differentiators, highlighting philosophical divisions between leading AI developers.
OpenAI also ran a Super Bowl ad focused on creativity and productivity, promoting tools such as its coding assistant Codex and encouraging users to build with AI. The contrast in messaging reflected deeper industry tensions as companies increasingly compete not only on model performance but also on business models and public narrative.
Altman pushed back against competitors’ claims last week, describing some of the messaging as misleading while defending OpenAI’s approach to monetization, according to the CNBC report. The company has explored advertising as one potential revenue stream as infrastructure costs for AI development continue to rise, even as executives emphasize transparency and user protections.
The heightened scrutiny reflects OpenAI’s position as a central player in the generative AI boom. Since the launch of ChatGPT, the company has become one of the most visible private technology firms globally, attracting attention from regulators, enterprise customers and rivals alike. This visibility has turned OpenAI into a lightning rod for debates about governance, commercialization and the societal impact of AI, the report said.
The broader context behind the rivalry also reflects the massive capital requirements underpinning AI development. OpenAI has secured computing agreements that could exceed $1 trillion in total value, tying its long-term strategy to large-scale infrastructure buildouts and partnerships across the technology ecosystem.
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