As of: February 15, 2024, 12:32 p.m
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The Microsoft logo at the Digital X internet conference in the Media Park.
© Rolf Vennenbernd/dpa
The boom in artificial intelligence has made Microsoft the most valuable company in the world.
Now the US group wants to expand with its AI applications in Germany.
Berlin/Düsseldorf - Microsoft will invest almost 3.3 billion euros in Germany over the next two years to massively expand its data center capacities for applications in the field of artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud computing.
Microsoft President Brad Smith announced this on Thursday in Berlin during a conversation with Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD).
According to dpa information, the investment funds will flow primarily to North Rhine-Westphalia, where Microsoft wants to set up a new cloud region.
Hesse will also benefit from the investments.
The Rhine/Main region is Germany's leading location for data centers due to the large Internet node DE-CIX in Frankfurt.
The existing Microsoft cloud region Rhine/Main will be further expanded.
The largest single investment in Microsoft's 40-year history in Germany also includes an AI training program intended to reach up to 1.2 million people.
With a total investment of 3.5 billion US dollars (3.26 billion euros), Germany leads the list of investment announcements from the world's leading software company: Microsoft President Smith promised last November that 2.5 billion would be invested in Great Britain by 2026 Pounds (2.9 billion euros) to invest to drive the growth of AI applications.
Just over a month earlier, during a visit to Australia, he had promised an investment of 5 billion Australian dollars (around 3 billion euros) in the AI sector.
Microsoft is a leading player in the international AI market, also because the software company invested several billion dollars early on to invest in the Californian AI start-up OpenAI.
The San Francisco company presented its text robot ChatGPT to a broader public in November 2022, triggering a wave of AI.
Microsoft has meanwhile invested billions more to build up large computing capacities for training AI.
The group uses AI technology, among other things, in its search engine Bing and as a “copilot” in its office programs.
The main competitor of the software giant from Redmond is Google with its AI program Gemini.
dpa