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Companies:
* [[Infosys]], an Indian IT firm<ref>{{cite news |title=Elon Musk, Infosys, others back OpenAI with $1 bn |url=https://www.business-standard.com/article/news-ians/elon-musk-infosys-others-back-openai-with-1-bn-115121200862_1.html |accessdate=30 August 2019 |work=Business Standard India |agency=IANS |publisher=Business Standard |date=12 December 2015 2015}}</ref>
* [[Microsoft]]'s cloud services division<ref>{{cite
The group started in early January 2016 with nine researchers. According to ''[[Wired (magazine)|Wired]]'', Brockman met with [[Yoshua Bengio]], one of the “founding fathers” of the [[deep learning]] movement, and drew up a list of the “best researchers in the field”. Microsoft's [[Peter Lee (computer scientist)|Peter Lee]] stated that the cost of a top AI researcher exceeds the cost of a top [[National Football League|NFL]] quarterback prospect. While OpenAI pays corporate-level (rather than nonprofit-level) salaries, it doesn't currently pay AI researchers salaries comparable to those of Facebook or Google. Nevertheless, Sutskever stated that he was willing to leave Google for OpenAI “partly of because of the very strong group of people and, to a very large extent, because of its mission.” Brockman stated that “the best thing that I could imagine doing was moving humanity closer to building real AI in a safe way.” OpenAI researcher [[Wojciech Zaremba]] stated that he turned down “borderline crazy” offers of two to three times his market value to join OpenAI instead.<ref name=wired_inside />
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