OpenAI could increase subscription prices to as much as $2,000 per month

by Yaron

OpenAI recently surpassed 1 million subscribers, each paying $20 (or more, for Teams and Enterprise), but that doesn’t seem to be enough to keep the company financially afloat given that hundreds of millions of people use the chatbot for free.

According to The Information, OpenAI is reportedly mulling over a massive rise in its subscription prices to as much as $2,000 per month for access to its latest and models, amid rumors of its potential bankruptcy.

Anyone can use OpenAI’s ChatGPT service for free; however, subscribers gain priority access to the AI model during times of peak usage, early access to new features, and the ability to create custom GPTs (the company only recently wheeled out its Dall-E image generator from behind the paywall). Citing early internal discussions, The Information reports that OpenAI is reportedly considering hiking the price of access by a whopping 9,900%, however there is no official word yet on the reasoning for such a move. It is also unclear if that price increase would apply to the current ChatGPT service running on the GPT-4o model, or to the upcoming Strawberry and Orion models.

 

Between hardware procurement, data center infrastructure, energy and cooling, not to mention the cost of actually training a large language model, generative AI is an expensive business. OpenAI, arguably the standard bearer for the industry, reportedly has spent $7 billion on training its models (compared to just $1.5 billion on staffing), is projecting losses of $5 billion (with a “B”), and based on projections, could be filing for bankruptcy within the next year — though a recent round of funding from investors will likely delay the need for drastic financial action.

OpenAI is also facing increased competition from the rest of the generative AI field. Google and Anthropic continue to iterate more competent and capable chatbots while matching OpenAI’s current subscription pricing, and Apple Intelligence is expected to begin rolling out to mobile devices and the desktop next month. This news also comes as investors grow increasingly anxious about the amount of money companies like Google and Microsoft are sinking into AI technology without seeing a particularly strong path to profitability.

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GPT-5: everything we know so far about OpenAI’s next frontier model
A MacBook Pro on a desk with ChatGPT's website showing on its display.

There’s perhaps no product more hotly anticipated in tech right now than GPT-5. Rumors about it have been circulating ever since the release of GPT-4, OpenAI’s groundbreaking foundational model that’s been the basis of everything the company has launched over the past year, such as GPT-4o, Advanced Voice Mode, and the OpenAI o1-preview.

Those are all interesting in their own right, but a true successor to GPT-4 is still yet to come. Now that it’s been over a year a half since GPT-4’s release, buzz around a next-gen model has never been stronger.
When will GPT-5 be released?
OpenAI has continued a rapid rate of progress on its LLMs. GPT-4 debuted on March 14, 2023, which came just four months after GPT-3.5 launched alongside ChatGPT. OpenAI has yet to set a specific release date for GPT-5, though rumors have circulated online that the new model could arrive as soon as late 2024.

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OpenAI could release its next-generation model by December
ChatGPT giving a response about its knowledge cutoff.

OpenAI plans to release its next-generation frontier model, code-named Orion and rumored to actually be GPT-5, by December, according to an exclusive report from The Verge. However, OpenAI boss Sam Altman is already pushing back.

According to “sources familiar with the plan,” Orion will not initially be released to the general public, as the previous GPT-4 variants were. Instead, the company intends to hand the new model over to select businesses and partners, who will then use it as a platform to build their own products and services. This is the same strategy that Nvidia is pursuing with its NVLM 1.0 family of large language models (LLMs).

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  • Computing

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke among thousands of artists who issue AI protest
Thom Yorke on stage.

Leading actors, authors, musicians, and novelists are among 11,500 artists to have put their name to a statement calling for a halt to the unlicensed use of creative works to train generative AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, describing it as a “threat” to the livelihoods of creators.

The open letter, comprising just 29 words, says: “The unlicensed use of creative works for training generative AI is a major, unjust threat to the livelihoods of the people behind those works, and must not be permitted.”

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