Box Inc. (NYSE:BOX) CEO Aaron Levie said the future balance of power in artificial intelligence (AI) will depend on whether open-source models can stay close enough to frontier systems to challenge the dominance of closed AI platforms.
Open Vs Closed AI Battle
On Sunday, in a post on X, Levie outlined a central divide in the AI industry: whether tightly controlled, closed AI systems or rapidly improving open-weight models will ultimately shape the market.
He argued that if closed models remain "perpetually at the frontier by a wide margin," then vertically integrated companies that restrict access to top-tier AI could maintain dominance.
However, he warned that the equation changes if open models stay competitive.
If "open weights AI can remain a close second to frontier intelligence, then the equation reverses," Levie wrote.
He added that in that scenario, "the vast majority of tokens used will go to an alternative stack" controlled outside leading frontier labs.
Levie said this shift would redirect usage, infrastructure demand and monetization toward open ecosystems, even if closed systems still lead at the very top end of capability.
He added that regulatory approaches would differ depending on how wide the performance gap becomes between proprietary and open systems.
AI Safety And Industry Competition Intensify
Earlier, Anthropic warned that AI systems could soon begin improving themselves faster than humans can control, calling for a coordinated industry pause if development outpaces safety safeguards.
The company said its Claude model was rapidly improving in coding and automation, reaching near-human performance and delivering major efficiency gains in software development.
Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) was viewed as a leader in AI monetization, with strong revenue gains from search, cloud and its Gemini model, while competitors faced higher costs and investor pressure.
Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (NASDAQ:SPCX) CEO Elon Musk also said Alphabet could lead the AI race in the West, with China and SpaceX dominating other segments, while warning that energy and chip supply would become key limits on AI expansion.
Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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