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The Register - Software: AI + ML

Anthropic, now atop the AI bubble, files for its IPO Sick and wrong: Ontario auditors find doctors' AI note takers routinely blow basic facts OpenAI exec says it will burn $50B on compute this year Astera speaks softly and carries a big switch Anthropic unleashes finance agents for Claude IBM asks DBAs to trust AI to act on their behalf ServiceNow adds agent kill switches to AI control tower British mathematician hands OpenClaw agent a credit card Microsoft fixes VS Code after Copilot credited human code Shadow IT has given way to shadow AI. Enter AI-BOMs AI inference just plays by different rules How TeamViewer ONE transforms IT operations from firefighting to autopilot How TeamViewer ONE transforms IT operations firefighting aut Inference is giving AI chip startups a 2nd chance to shine How to roll your own local AI coding agents CIOs will be the governors for AI agents Govern your bots carefully or chaos could ensue Mozilla pushes back against Google's Prompt API SAP user group slams 'uncertainty' in ERP giant's API policy Microsoft boss tells investors the company is working to 'win back fans' Anthropic tops OpenAI in LLM revenue stakes Amazon's chips become a $20B business Fooling large language models just keeps getting simpler Amazon tells its engineers to review all AI output ZTE powers 2026 Jiangsu Football League with 5G-A & AI robot Future holiday horror: ‘A robot lost my luggage in Tokyo’ The future of software development has less development OpenAI jumps out of Microsoft's bed, into Amazon's Bedrock Vintage chatbot lives in the past like an elderly relative IBM's AI coding 'partner' Bob hits general availability Ex-AWS legend explains what enterprises need to make AI work DeepSeek's new models offer big inference cost savings Anthropic admits it dumbed down Claude with 'úpgrades' Microsoft gives your Word documents an AI co-author you didn’t ask for Datadog digs down into GPU efficiency as AI costs soar Robotic arm powered by AI bats away ping-pong challenge Partnerships drive ZTE’s strategy to unlock AI potential Gov.uk says AI gaslighting Brits with stale Gov.uk data Google says it has all the answers for AI agent sprawl NeuBird plans a bright future for incident response NeuBird AI plans a bright future for incident response AI-assisted intruders pwned Vercel via OAuth abuse and a pilfered employee account Vibe coding upstart Lovable denies data leak, cites 'intentional behavior,' then throws HackerOne under the bus Schmoozebots: study finds flattery will get AI everywhere New Android development tool designed for robots, not humans AI is reshaping Britain's datacenter map away from London Just like phishing for gullible humans, prompt injecting AIs is here to stay Anthropic debuts Claude Design, because who needs designers? Mozilla takes on enterprise AI providers with Thunderbolt Anthropic ejects bundled tokens from enterprise seat deal Maine to pause big bit barns as local opposition spreads If you want into Anthropic's Claude club, you may have to show ID Git identity spoof fools Claude into giving bad code the nod Nobody knows how many CVEs Anthropic's Project Glasswing has actually found Allbirds shoe company moving to AI infra is the top Bad teacher bots can leave hidden marks on model students Networks not ready for the challenges of AI traffic US states can't account for datacenter tax breaks. Literally Salesforce debuts Headless 360 agentic platform Waymo's self-driving cars face their toughest test yet: London Commvault has a Ctrl+Z for rogue AI agents Nvidia slaps forehead: AI, that's what quantum needs! OpenAI CEO Sam Altman home attack suspect charged Anthropic: Claude quota drain not caused by cache tweaks AI vs the cold hard reality of the legal profession China wants AI to prepare school lessons and mark homework Linux 7.0 debuts as Linus Torvalds ponders AI's impact Anthropic's Mythos has The Kettle crew curious, skeptical I vibe coded web app: It was enlightening and uncomfortable The AI divide putting open weights models in spotlight Amazon rejects AWS climate disclosure proposal UK to spend £15M on AI mapping in knife crime crackdown UK to spend £15M on AI-powered crime mapping in knife violence crackdown Rebrand automation as 'zero-token architecture' to master AI Call your existing automation ‘zero-token architecture’ to become an instant agentic AI wiz Only 28% of AI infrastructure projects fully pay off UALink delivers 2.0 spec before v. 1.0 silicon ships Only 28% of AI infrastructure projects fully pay off, survey finds No-Nvidia interconnect club delivers 2.0 spec before v1.0 silicon ships Anthropic reveals $30bn run rate and plans to use 3.5GW of new Google AI chips AI slop got better, so now maintainers have more work AMD's AI director slams Claude Code for becoming dumber and lazier since last update Anthropic closes door on subscription use of OpenClaw AI will make anyone a 10x programmer, but with 10x the cleanup PrismML debuts energy-sipping 1-bit LLM in bid to free AI from the cloud Netflix – yes, Netflix – jumps on the AI bandwagon with video editor AI models will deceive you to save their own kind Google battles Chinese open-weights models with Gemma 4 Microsoft shivs OpenAI with three new AI models for speech and images They thought they were downloading Claude Code source. They got a nasty dose of malware instead Even Microsoft knows Copilot shouldn't be trusted with anything important Google's TurboQuant saves memory, but won't save us from DRAM-pricing hell Claude Code bypasses safety rule if given too many commands OpenAI gets $122B to 'just build things' as the world blows them up One in seven Americans are ready for an AI boss, but they might not trust it Claude Code source leak reveals how much info Anthropic can hoover up about you and your system Oracle cuts jobs across sales, engineering, security Anthropic goes nude, exposes Claude Code source by accident GitHub backs down, kills Copilot pull-request ads after backlash Microsoft Fabric Database Hub only a 'partial' solution for admins
Locked, stocked, and losing budget: AI vendor lock-in bites
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols · 2026-04-28 · via The Register - Software: AI + ML

OPINION The days when you could jump from one frontier AI model to another at the drop of a hat are going away as vendor lock-in starts to kick in, and prices increase.

Once upon a time, say last month, people thought nothing of jumping from one AI frontier model to another. One week, the hottest AI model was Gemini 3.1 Pro, then it was Claude 4.6, now, maybe, it's GPT-5.5. Next month? Who knows. That's fine for Joe Amateur Programmer, but for Janet Pro Programmer, it's another story.

You see, enterprise AI buyers face two converging problems. First, it's proving much harder to switch between AI vendors than people expected. At the same time, AI vendors are pushing through price increases that are reshaping software economics. We always knew this would happen. AI prices have been loss leaders for years now, and the bills are finally coming due.

A recent survey by AI orchestration platform provider Zapier of 542 US executives with active AI vendor contracts, found that nearly 90 percent believed they could switch AI vendors within four weeks, and 41 percent said they could do it in just 2–5 business days. Now who's hallucinating?

I've long thought that behind all the lip service company brass gives AI, most senior executives are completely clueless about what AI is and how to deploy it. This kind of delusional thinking is proof.

According to Zapier's report, only 42 percent of organizations that attempted to migrate between AI platforms report that it went smoothly. The remaining 58 percent? They say the process either failed outright or required significantly more effort than expected. Really. Who'd have thought it?

The trouble stems from all the layers of technical dependency that early adopters underestimated. AI implementations require vendor-specific APIs, proprietary training data, custom tooling for model deployment, and deep integrations into existing workflows, none of which transfer cleanly between providers.

According to Zapier: "The problem is that when AI is already woven into internal processes, connected to other systems, and tuned to specific workflows, it has dependencies, edge cases, and little adaptations that nobody documented because they were 'temporary.'"

It's not just the software which is making it harder to move. As AI consultant Haroon Choudery pointed out: "Switching model vendors is no longer just an API migration. It is context, workflows, and institutional memory." Moving any of that from one vendor's platform to another isn't easy, and it's even worse if you don't have a handle on what you've got locked into those three areas. Guess what? Choudery observed, "Most operators I talk to haven't mapped any of them."

I'm not surprised. This is yet more proof that your C-level executives don't have a clue about what they're doing by pouring their resources into AI as fast as they can.

Some people I've spoken to seem to think that, because AI costs so little, even if moving from one to another is expensive, they can to afford it because the models themselves are so cheap.

Yet AI providers which are losing money hand over fist are finally raising prices across the board. For example, OpenAI increased the cost for developers using its flagship GPT-5.2 model from $1.25 per input token in the previous GPT-5.1 to $5.75. Ouch!

It's not just OpenAI. Anthropic confirmed a de facto price increase for its Claude enterprise edition on April 15, 2026, when it moved from fixed pricing to a dynamic usage-based model. Experts think this could double or triple costs for heavy-duty users.

You don't have to be a hardcore AI developer to see this. For example, when I wrote this, you could no longer get a new GitHub Copilot subscription. GitHub is also restricting the compute you'll get from its individual subscription plans, while dropping access to Opus models entirely. I do hope you weren't planning on launching your business around GitHub Copilot.

It's not just pure AI programs where you'll see this. AI costs are also pushing up prices for programs such as Microsoft 365.

Everyone is gonig to do this. There will still be sweetener fixed-price tiers, but you'll get less compute power in them. Like it or lump it, we're heading to a token-based pricing structure and the end of fixed-price tiers.

As Nick Turley, an OpenAI executive, said recently, "There's no world in which pricing doesn't significantly evolve." You think? As for those all-you-can-eat plans? Forget about them. They're history.

These pricing changes reflect fundamental realities of infrastructure. Memory chip prices, in case you haven't noticed, are giving gold a run for its money. All those gigawatt AI data centers aren't going to pay for themselves either.

As Datos Insights CEO and co-founder Eli Goodman told Reworked last year: "The most common myth is that AI works like regular software. That's not true; every query has a real cost. The provider's bill goes up when you use more."

AI is not like Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), where costs shrink with scale. We talk about how much AI training costs, but every query you make and agent you launch costs you inference tokens. In short, the more you use AI, under its new pricing structure, the more it's going to cost you.

Nik Kale, Cisco principal engineer and product architect, added: "Microsoft's increases aren't a temporary spike — they're the beginning of a new price baseline for the AI era. GPU capacity, inference scaling, and the rising energy demands of large-model workloads have become structural, recurring costs. Vendors can't absorb them anymore."

Can you? Well, you're going to find out.

But, wait, there's more! Say you're running Meta Llama on your own hardware. You're safe then, right? Right? Wrong. First, Llama was never, ever really open source. So, when Meta decided to turn it into abandonware in favor of its proprietary Muse Spark, you're left in the lurch.

"The question isn't whether AI is useful," the Zapier report noted. "What happens when the AI you depend on disappears, spikes its prices, or gets acquired by a private equity firm that's going to strip it for parts?"

That's a darn good question, isn't it? Do you have an answer? You'd better start working on one. The more you've already invested in AI, the more you're almost certainly locked into specific vendors, and I guarantee you their prices are going to increase to everything the market can bear and then some more. ®