
Amazon has unified its artificial intelligence operations under one leader.
The e-commerce and cloud computing giant appointed Peter DeSantis, a 27-year AWS veteran, to lead a newly unified organization spanning AI model development, custom chip design, and quantum computing research.
The move represents a strategic reorganization aimed at accelerating Amazon’s push to compete directly with OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft in the high-stakes race for AI dominance.
DeSantis, who currently serves as senior vice president of AWS Utility Computing, will report directly to CEO Andy Jassy, underscoring the initiative’s strategic importance to the company’s future.
The announcement coincides with Rohit Prasad’s planned departure at year-end.
Prasad, who led Amazon’s AGI team and oversaw development of the Nova family of foundation models, will exit after two years steering the company’s most ambitious AI efforts.
His departure suggests Amazon views consolidation as the path forward in competing against rivals who have already integrated their AI operations with infrastructure and silicon capabilities.
Amazon’s playbook: Consolidating AI, chips and quantum
Jassy framed the reorganization as a response to what Amazon calls an “inflection point” in its AI capabilities.
The new structure places DeSantis at the intersection of three critical technical layers: frontier models through the Nova lineup, custom silicon via Annapurna Labs’ Trainium and Graviton processors, and emerging quantum systems.
This vertical integration mirrors strategies already executed by Microsoft, which combines OpenAI partnerships with Azure infrastructure, and reflects Amazon’s determination to own more of the AI stack itself.
DeSantis brings formidable credentials to the role.
He led Amazon EC2 at its 2006 launch, spearheaded the 2015 acquisition of Annapurna Labs, and has overseen global data center infrastructure spanning 38 geographic regions and 120 availability zones.
His appointment also includes the elevation of Pieter Abbeel, co-founder of robotics startup Covariant and described as “one of the world’s leading AI researchers,” to lead frontier model research within the AGI division.
The timing reflects urgency.
Amazon released Nova 2 models just days before the announcement at its re:Invent conference.
What this means for the AI race
The reorganization signals Amazon’s belief that integrated infrastructure delivers a competitive advantage.
By uniting model development with custom chips and quantum research under one executive, Amazon aims to optimize end-to-end performance while reducing dependence on Nvidia GPUs and controlling margins.
This mirrors successful strategies in cloud computing, where AWS’s Nitro system, designed in-house and essential to every AWS server, became a key differentiator.
All three hyperscalers are facing capacity constraints as demand for AI infrastructure outpaces supply expansion.
Industry observers suggest DeSantis’s move could reshape competitive dynamics if Amazon successfully bridges its hardware and software innovation cycles.
AWS still commands approximately 30% of the cloud market and leads traditional machine learning workloads, yet lags in generative AI case studies relative to market share.
Consolidating DeSantis’s technical depth with Nova’s cost advantages and Trainium’s emerging traction could narrow that gap.
Reports suggest Amazon is also in talks to invest at least $10 billion in OpenAI, which could involve OpenAI adopting Amazon’s Trainium chips, a potential symbolic victory demonstrating customer confidence in Amazon’s silicon.
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