ARTICLE 19 deeply regrets that Artificial Intelligence company Nvidia’s acquisition of Run;ai has received unconditional approval from the European Commission.
Together with a group of civil society organisations, we expressed our concerns about the extreme and growing concentration of power in the AI technology stack in our submission on 10 December. In the submission, we requested that the Commission opens an in-depth investigation into the planned merger. We view this transaction as a means for Nvidia to reinforce its dominant position in the supply of advanced graphics processing units (GPUs) by integrating Run:ai software to build an additional barrier around its chip empire. The ensuing bottleneck poses a serious risk for the entire AI sector – weakening the supply chain and undermining Europe’s AI companies to remain competitive in global markets.
Furthermore, the reliance on a single supplier for a critical technology will further undermine Europe’s resilience. The majority of the computation clusters in Europe are already fitted with Nvidia GPUs most efficient for large-scale training. Tackling the sustained and centralised materials dependencies underpinning the current AI ecosystem in Europe requires competition authorities to take a much more aggressive approach. Regulators must conduct in-depth investigations and use existing tools at their disposal effectively, such as imposing structural remedies or prohibiting planned acquisitions.
ARTICLE 19 and partner organisations hope the recent decision does not reflect the future path of the new Commission under Commissioner Teresa Ribera.