Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic Form AI Industry Group

Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic Form AI Industry Group

The News: On July 26, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic announced they have formed a new industry group, The Frontier Model Forum, with the intent of building and promoting best practices for the development of generative AI models. The group calls these models “frontier models”, though this is not necessarily a widely-accepted term yet. Other names associated with these models are foundational models or generative AI models.

The Forum’s objectives are to 1) advance AI safety research; 2) identify and promote best practices; and 3) collaborate with policymakers, academics, and other stakeholders to share knowledge about frontier model trust and safety risks.

The Forum will accept organizations as members if they meet certain criteria, the most important being that the organization develops and deploys frontier models (as defined by the Forum), they demonstrate strong commitment to frontier model safety, and are willing to contribute to joint Forum initiatives.

Essentially, the Forum will work on developing standards for frontier models with the hope of informing regulatory bodies and influencing regulation.

Read the full announcement on the Google blog.

Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic Form AI Industry Group

Analyst Take: AI advocates have struggled for several years to coalesce and unify to form a definitive AI industry group. There is a good reason for this – AI is a broadly diffused technology, and it applies across a massive range of industry sectors and interests. It has taken a disruption moment in the form of generative AI to unify advocacy. The Frontier Model Forum has the potential to solidify AI advocacy. Here are the key takeaways about the potential impact of the Frontier Model Forum:

Open-ended, vague specifics on frontier models make sense. Governments should heed.

The Frontier Model Forum did not make any specific promises or suggestions about what they define as responsible development of frontier models, or what those risks, limitations, or impacts are to the public. There is a really good reason for that – it is very hard to build standards or laws on speculative outcomes. In these very early days of generative AI, there are few solidly commercially-viable use cases (code development is a potential exception). Lawmakers have been forced to address some of the impacts of generative AI without the benefit of commercial outputs. Regulations have to be broad enough to encompass unknown developments. With this in mind, there is a growing sentiment to incorporate flexibility into AI regulations and standards. In a recent position paper on the EU’s draft AI Act, the American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union suggested flexibility (noted from the executive summary): “ensure that requirements on providers of general purpose AI and foundation models are targeted, realistic and flexible”, “ensure a flexible and clear approach to standardisation .”

Potential rival industry groups for AI?

The Frontier Model Forum notes they “will also seek to build on the valuable work of existing industry, civil society, and research efforts across each of its workstreams. Initiatives such as the Partnership on AI and MLCommons continue to make important contributions across the AI community, and the Forum will explore ways to collaborate with and support these and other valuable multi-stakeholder efforts.” Google and Microsoft are members of the Partnership, but what if other advocacy groups emerge? When standards are being determined, some organizations find themselves at odds with other organizations. The telecommunications industry is a good example of where rival advocacy groups have battled (GSM vs. CDMA the most prominent, but even today multiple groups advocate for various standards – for instance, O-RAN alliance and Telecom Infra Project). Given the broad potential range of AI applications, there is a good chance other advocacy groups could form with different views. If they do, it could slow standards formation down.

Standards development is a very slow process. They require negotiations and complete agreement across a broad range of constituents. We should not expect the development of AI standards to be any different.

Guardrails for legacy responsible AI apply to frontier models and current laws can safeguard

For the past 3-4 years, forward-thinking AI advocates have been building best practices for responsible AI. In managing AI risk, enterprises must think about four key areas: privacy, bias/accuracy, security, and transparency. All of these principles apply, maybe doubly so, to generative AI applications. The Frontier Model Forum will likely adhere to those guardrails to build standards and advocate for regulation. Many current laws provide protections for AI risks, from privacy protection laws like GDPR, to copyright and IP infringement. It will be interesting to see where the Forum or other AI advocacy groups will fall about more specific regulations for AI in that regard.

Disclosure: The Futurum Group is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.

Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of The Futurum Group as a whole.

Other insights from The Futurum Group:

UK AI Regulations Criticized: A Cautionary Tale for AI Safety

The EU’s AI Act: Q3 2023 Update

Tech Giants and White House Join Forces on Safe AI Usage

Author Information

Based in Tampa, Florida, Mark is a veteran market research analyst with 25 years of experience interpreting technology business and holds a Bachelor of Science from the University of Florida.

Related Insights
Kore.ai and Atos Bet on Sovereign Agentic AI, Will UK Enterprises Demand Proof, Not Promises?
July 8, 2026

Kore.ai and Atos Bet on Sovereign Agentic AI, Will UK Enterprises Demand Proof, Not Promises?

Kore.ai and Atos announce a strategic partnership to deliver Sovereign AI solutions to UK organizations, addressing data residency and compliance requirements in the rapidly expanding $181B AI platforms market....
Provisioned Throughput Redefines Open Model Inference Economics and Predictability
July 8, 2026

Provisioned Throughput Redefines Open Model Inference Economics and Predictability

Together AI's Provisioned Throughput offers enterprises reserved inference capacity, token-based pricing, 99% uptime SLA, and up to 90% cost savings, addressing critical production AI concerns....
Will Apple’s New Siri AI Deliver on the Promise of Apple Intelligence?
July 7, 2026

Will Apple’s New Siri AI Deliver on the Promise of Apple Intelligence?

Olivier Blanchard, Research Director at The Futurum Group, examines how Siri AI transforms Apple Intelligence from a feature set into a systemwide layer for apps, workflows, and user experiences across...
Can ASUS Bring Data-Center-Class AI Infrastructure to the Deskside
July 7, 2026

Can ASUS Bring Data-Center-Class AI Infrastructure to the Deskside?

Olivier Blanchard, Research Director at The Futurum Group, examines how ASUS is bringing data-center-class AI infrastructure to the deskside with the ExpertCenter Pro ET900N G3 and what its local AI...
Does Qodo's Codebase-Wide Enforcement Redefine What 'AI Code Review' Means?
July 7, 2026

Does Qodo’s Codebase-Wide Enforcement Redefine What ‘AI Code Review’ Means?

Qodo's full codebase context approach positions it as a pre-merge quality gate, addressing enterprise reliability concerns that have slowed AI adoption in software engineering workflows....
Qualcomm's Snapdragon Reality Elite Ups the Stakes for Spatial AI
July 6, 2026

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Reality Elite Ups the Stakes for Spatial AI

Olivier Blanchard, Research Director & Practice Lead, Intelligent Devices at Futurum, Qualcomm's Snapdragon Reality Elite positions the chipmaker as a spatial AI leader, enabling on-device processing for mixed reality experiences....

Book a Demo

Welcome

The vision behind everything in Futurum’s Custom Research practice is this: research should show you what is happening, what comes next, and what to do about it. It should be personal to each audience, easy for people to grasp, and structured so LLMs can reason over it accurately. And it should be fast and turnkey; you want answers now, not another project to carry for quarters.

Whether you are defining business, channel, or go-to-market strategy; evaluating vendors or justifying ROI; or commissioning research to fill an emerging market need, we have your back, with a program that answers your questions with the objectivity and credibility to drive real decisions.

To do it, we bring unmatched data to bear: Futurum research, surveys, and market projections; validated market feeds; ETR’s 15 years of insight from 10,000 technology decision-makers; G2’s buyer and user data; and what our analysts hear every day. Add leading primary collection, from AI-moderated voice interviews to surveys and analyst-led interviews, all turnkey, and every project comes out credible, nuanced, and actionable.

And we don’t just drop the results in your lap. For internal work, we provide analyst-led sessions, interactive dashboards, and a range of formats. For market-facing work, Futurum delivers turnkey activation and amplification that actually gets seen, by people and by LLMs, through our media and share of voice. This is research that moves decisions and markets.

We will meet you wherever you are, from a fast-turn brief to a multi-year program, and shape the work to your goals, timeline, and budget. The right program for your moment.

If any of this is useful, I would love to talk.

Benjamin Brown, VP Custom Research, Futurum Research

Benjamin Brown

VP, Custom Research · The Futurum Group

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.