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Tech Giants Outpace Startups in Generative AI Race, Palihapitiya Warns
20 Oct
Summary
- Venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya says tech giants will win the generative AI race
- Google's Gemini has gained significant market share over the past 12 months
- Meta is also poised to surge due to its massive user base and distribution channels

According to a recent analysis by venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya, the generative AI race will ultimately be won by established tech incumbents, not new startups. Palihapitiya cites the "massive distribution" of these tech giants as the decisive factor.
Palihapitiya's analysis focuses on data from Similarweb, which shows that while OpenAI is still the clear leader in the generative AI market, its commanding percentage share has been steadily eroding over the last 12 months as the overall market grows. Interestingly, the beneficiaries of this trend are not other startups, but rather the tech giants.
Palihapitiya points to Google's Gemini as a prime example, noting that its traffic share has expanded significantly over the past year. He argues that Google is successfully leveraging its existing ecosystem, from search to Android, to push its AI models to billions of users - a distribution network that startups simply cannot match.
The venture capitalist also identified Meta Platforms as another incumbent poised to surge in the generative AI space. He believes that when Meta "gets their act together," they will be able to quickly gain market share by integrating their AI models across their massive social media platforms.
This analysis suggests that while startups like OpenAI may have created the generative AI category, the long-term battle will be fought over distribution channels. Palihapitiya concludes that startups may need to "license Grok aggressively OR acquire existing distribution for their models" to remain viable against the tech giants.