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US AI startup Poolside raises $126m seed round and relocates to France

Paris-based startup Poolside AI has raised $126 million in a seed round led by French billionaire Xavier Niel and US VC Felicis, to develop an AI model that can write software code and eventually enable users to create applications without coding experience, with the company also opening a French subsidiary and relocating its HQ to Paris in a boost to the country's AI ambitions.

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Relevant topic timeline:
- Foundry Technologies is in talks to raise money at a valuation of $350 million, a significant increase from its previous valuation of $50 million. - The increase in valuation highlights the trend of hot companies in the AI sector raising money at rapidly escalating valuations. - Foundry is one of many AI startups that have experienced a meteoric rise in valuation this year. - The company plans to rent servers to companies for running AI software. - The risky pandemic-era fundraising trend of rapidly increasing valuations in short periods of time has returned.
- Navin Chaddha is managing partner at Mayfield, a venture capital firm. - Mayfield has announced the $250 million Mayfield AI Start, a dedicated seed vehicle to support AI-native founders. - Mayfield is sharing five pieces of company-building advice with AI-native founders. - The advice includes focusing on dominating a new tech stack layer, providing a painkiller rather than a vitamin, and understanding the market dynamics. - Mayfield highlights the importance of building a strong team and having a clear go-to-market strategy. - The firm also emphasizes the need for founders to have a long-term vision and to be adaptable to changes in the AI landscape.
- The venture capital landscape for AI startups has become more focused and selective. - Investors are starting to gain confidence and make choices in picking platforms for their future investments. - There is a debate between buying or building AI solutions, with some seeing value in large companies building their own AI properties. - With the proliferation of AI startups, venture capitalists are finding it harder to choose which ones to invest in. - Startups that can deliver real, measurable impact and have a working product are more likely to attract investors.
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Hugging Face, an AI startup, has raised $235 million in a Series D funding round, with participation from tech giants such as Google, Amazon, Nvidia, and IBM, and now has a valuation of $4.5 billion, signaling the growing demand for AI platforms and tools.
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Artificial general intelligence (AGI) and AI ethics are among the important AI terms to know as AI's potential to reshape economies is estimated to be worth $4.4 trillion annually, according to McKinsey Global Institute.
More than 25% of investments in American startups this year have gone to AI-related companies, which is more than double the investment levels from the previous year. Despite a general downturn in startup funding across various industries, AI companies are resilient and continue to attract funding, potentially due to the widespread applicability of AI technologies across different sectors. The trend suggests that being an AI company may become an expected part of a startup's business model.
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Floworks, an AI assistant designed to enhance the worker experience by helping with mundane enterprise tasks, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding and aims to differentiate itself by offering interoperability across multiple applications.
Anguilla's .ai domain name could generate around $30 million this year as companies register domains for AI startups and platforms, contributing to roughly 10% of the territory's GDP.
AI In brief X, formerly known as Twitter, has updated its privacy policy to state that it may train its AI models on user posts, with the policy change expected to take effect on September 29; however, CEO Elon Musk has clarified that private data, such as text in direct messages, will not be used to train the models. Doug Lenat, a prominent figure in the field of AI, has passed away, leaving behind a legacy of pioneering work in neurosymbolic systems and machine reasoning. AI21 Labs, an Israeli startup, has raised $155 million in its Series C round, with a valuation of $1.4 billion; the company offers API access to its language models and tools designed for various tasks like summarization and question answering. US newspaper chain Gannett has temporarily halted the publication of AI-generated sports articles after the machine-written pieces received criticism for their errors and poor writing quality.
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Imbue, a woman-led AI research startup, has raised $200 million in a Series B funding round led by the Astera Institute, valuing the company at over $1 billion, but it could be years before it reveals a product. Imbue's focus is on developing AI "agents" that can simulate human decision-making to complete complex tasks, and it has access to 10,000 Nvidia H100 GPUs to build these agents. The startup is still in the early stages and has not yet released a demo of its agents.
C3.ai shares plunged over 12% after the AI software maker announced that it would invest more heavily in generative AI solutions, leading to a delay in profitability expectations, but CEO Thomas Siebel expressed confidence in seizing opportunities for AI growth.
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European AI startup Druid has raised $30 million in a Series B funding round to support its U.S. growth, which currently accounts for the majority of its revenue, as it expands its conversational business applications powered by generative AI.
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Indie Game Studios' imprint Stronghold Games has sparked controversy by using generative AI in the production of expansions for their popular board game Terraforming Mars, which has already raised over $1.3 million on Kickstarter. The use of AI in the game's development has raised concerns about copyright infringement and artist compensation, but the company sees the technology as a cost-saving and time-saving tool that can revolutionize the industry.
San Francisco-based AI startup Writer has raised $100 million in a funding round led by Iconiq Growth, bringing its valuation to $500 million, and aims to help businesses use large language models to generate content across different departments.
Real estate developer Gary Dillabough is pursuing the creation of an artificial intelligence incubator in downtown San Jose, with potential plans to bring in 40 or 50 AI startups, which could significantly boost the city's economy and establish it as a hub for AI development.