The moves come as makers of AI agents develop technology designed to make travel arrangements for users based on their unique preferences. This could upend the $1.6t global travel market, allowing more hotels and airlines to be accessed directly, and would disrupt the business model of dominant online travel agents that rely on the commissions and fees they can charge those businesses.
“We don’t have to do what OpenAI, Google, Grok or Meta are doing . . . [all of whom] are having to invest incredible amounts of money to build these models,” said Glenn...
