
However, the recent reaffirmation of the Microsoft relationship “muddies the waters,” because it grants OpenAI the right to strike deals with cloud rivals, as long as Microsoft retains its rich revenue-sharing agreement and exclusive hold over stateless models, he noted. This seems to imply that stateful models “may be out of this exclusive IP scope.”
Ultimately, “Microsoft’s aggressive legal response is standard fare for IP disputes among large tech firms, and should not scare away would-be customers,” Bickley emphasized, adding that it will likely be resolved via negotiations.
However, an additional looming issue is the potential for vendor lock-in, he noted. Frontier is tied to OpenAI’s architecture, and now adds “additional lock-in layers” for customer data stored in AWS, along with proprietary orchestration layers through which AI agents will flow. Therefore, as these agentic workflows begin to manage critical enterprise processes, customers’ business workflows could be “distinctly tied” to AWS.

