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(Reuters) - Microsoft has scrapped leases for sizeable data center capacity in the U.S., suggesting a potential oversupply at the tech giant as it builds out artificial intelligence infrastructure ...
Microsoft Corp. has canceled some leases for US data center capacity, according to TD Cowen, raising broader concerns over whether it’s securing more AI computing capacity than it needs in the ...
Microsoft is reportedly shrinking its data center footprint. The tech giant has canceled leases with multiple data center providers that total a “couple hundred megawatts” of capacity ...
Microsoft has axed some of its leases on data centers as DeepSeek’s rapid rise casts doubt over massive US spending on artificial intelligence, according to a report.
Microsoft said it still plans to spend more than $80 billion globally to expand its AI infrastructure this fiscal year, which ends in June, and has already doubled its data center capacity over ...
Microsoft and OpenAI to build an AI-centric data center with AI chips, servers and models for $100 billion in the U.S., including a Stargate supercomputer.
Microsoft and ChatGPT parent OpenAI are working on plans for a data-center project that could cost as much as $100 billion and include an artificial intelligence supercomputer called “Stargate ...
He said: “In FY 2025, Microsoft is on track to invest approximately $80 billion to build-out AI-enabled data centers to train AI models and deploy AI and cloud-based applications around the world.More ...
Microsoft is planning to invest about $80 billion in fiscal 2025 on developing data centers to train artificial intelligence models and deploy AI and cloud-based applications, the company said in ...
Microsoft Corp. has canceled some leases for US data center capacity, according to TD Cowen, raising broader concerns over whether it’s securing more AI computing capacity than it needs in the ...
Despite a pledge made in January to spend $80 billion on AI data centers in FY 2025, a new report indicates Microsoft is already dropping some of its current data center leases.