Startups

Startups Weekly: What goes up must come down

Comment

The crowd cheers at Playalinda Beach in the Canaveral National Seashore, just north of the Kennedy Space Center, during the launch of the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, on Feb. 6, 2018. Playalinda is one of closest public viewing spots to see the launch, about 3 miles from the SpaceX launchpad 39-A. (Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Image Credits: Orlando Sentinel (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday.

Helloooo, startup nerds! I spent much of this week in San Jose hanging out in the world of AI startups and tech giants at GTC, and I have a ton of fun stories in the pipeline from there, so stay tuned for all of that. In the meantime … let’s look at the exciting goodness that has been the past week of TechCrunch startup coverage!

Most interesting startup stories from the week

Let’s talk about microbiomes… Image Credits: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Image Credits: Bloomberg / Getty Images

In a dramatic turn of events, Microsoft has effectively absorbed Inflection, a once-promising AI startup that raised a staggering $1.3 billion just nine months ago. The acquisition sees Inflection’s co-founders, Mustafa Suleyman and Karén Simonyan, along with a significant portion of their team, transitioning to Microsoft to spearhead the newly formed Microsoft AI division. This move leaves Inflection, under the guidance of Reid Hoffman and new CEO Sean White, in a precarious position as it attempts to salvage what remains of its co-founders’ ambitious project. Microsoft’s role in this saga raises eyebrows, as it positions itself as both a savior and an opportunist, capitalizing on the struggles of its investments to consolidate its dominance in the AI space.

Meanwhile, over in the land of biotech, the sector’s latest fascination, the microbiome, has been hailed as a frontier for personalized health solutions, promising to tackle everything from digestive issues to skin conditions. However, a recent report in Science casts a shadow over the burgeoning industry, suggesting that many microbiome companies may be operating with more enthusiasm than scientific rigor. These startups, riding the wave of affordable genome sequencing and venture capital, offer services that profile the unique microbial communities in our bodies to identify health problems and solutions. Yet, the report raises concerns about the lack of meaningful regulation and scientific consensus in this complex field, likening some practices to modern-day snake oil salesmanship. Despite the criticism, companies like Parallel Health, Tiny Health, and Daye defend their approaches, emphasizing their commitment to achieving scientific legitimacy.

  • Investors are hungry for AI: Astera Labs’ IPO pops 72% on the first day, showing that investor demand for tech with an AI twist is high.
  • Apple adds AI to its shopping basket: Apple, the tech behemoth known for its sleek devices and tight-lipped announcements, has quietly added another gem to its crown by acquiring DarwinAI, a Canadian startup that’s all about making manufacturing smarter with its vision-based AI technology.
  • Tradin’ up: TipTop is expanding its ecosystem. Its new platform offers a seamless experience for purchasing new, open-box, and refurbished devices with cash and through trade-ins, according to the startup’s founder, Bastian Lehmann, who previously founded Postmates.

Most interesting fundraises this week

Sneaking in some healthcare through the side door. Image Credits: Getty Images
Image Credits: Getty Images

Telegram, the messaging app giant with a user base north of 900 million, just flexed its financial muscles by securing a whopping $330 million through bond sales, as announced by its founder and CEO, Pavel Durov. The bond bonanza was a hit, attracting more cash than they had room for, with Durov boasting about snagging “global funds of the highest caliber” under terms that made this the sweetest deal in Telegram’s history. While Durov played coy on who exactly threw their money into the ring, he was clear that these investors are betting big on Telegram’s growth trajectory. The company is aiming for profitability next year, and last raised $220 million worth of funding through bonds about a year ago.

  • Would you like a side of healthcare with that?: Insurance Tech has had some false starts, but a new hero emerges: “embedded insurance.” This genius idea of sneaking insurance into your shopping cart like an extra pair of socks you didn’t know you needed has given the sector a much-needed face-lift. Not to be outdone, “embedded health” has strutted onto the scene, with The CareVoice leading the charge from Shanghai, bagging $10 million in Series B funding amid a venture capital famine in the sector.
  • I see a red door and I want it painted green: In the grand corporate quest to paint everything green, from their logos to their carbon footprints, the big guns have been flaunting their net-zero emissions targets like the latest fashion trend. But what about the little guys? Enter Greenly, the Parisian knight in shining armor, armed with carbon accounting software that promises to make sense of the carbon chaos without needing an army of analysts.
  • The PC is dead — long live the browser: The Browser Company, creators of the Arc browser, is riding high on a fresh $50 million investment wave, led by Pace Capital, valuing the startup at a cool $550 million. With a total of $128 million in funding under its belt, this outfit is on a mission to redefine your digital life, starting with the browser.

Trend of the week: The higher they soar, the harder they fall

Fisker Ocean SUV driving away
Fisker had a great run but has now paused production. Image Credits: Fisker
Image Credits: Fisker

It’s been a week of highs and lows. Where some startups are meeting their demise, others are rising from the ashes, while others again are filling the void left by their falling brethren. All very dramatic.

One example of this drama is between Google and the EU. The search giant finds itself in hot water once again with France’s Autorité de la Concurrence, which has slapped the tech giant with a €250 million fine (around $270 million) for misusing news publishers’ content to train its AI model, Bard/Gemini, without proper notification. This latest fine is part of a longstanding feud over copyright protections, with Google previously attempting to sidestep EU digital copyright reforms by limiting access to its news services in France. The Autorité‘s investigation revealed that Google not only failed to inform publishers about the use of their content for AI training but also lacked a mechanism for publishers to opt out without affecting their visibility on Google’s other services until late September 2023. Meanwhile, Midjourney thinks it has a plan to beat the copyright cops.

  • From the ashes they rise: As Mint bids adieu to the budgeting app world, Copilot is celebrating, heralding the end of Mint as a win for its own finance app. With over 100,000 subscribers, Copilot is on a mission to prove that personal finance management can be less about nagging notifications on “big purchases” (looking at you, Mint) and more about actually understanding where your money is going.
  • <screeeeeeeeech>: Fisker once zoomed into the public eye with its electric Ocean SUV but is now hitting the brakes hard, announcing a six-week production pause as it desperately searches the couch cushions for a cash infusion. With the clock ticking and the cash burning, Fisker’s story is starting to read more like a cautionary tale than a success story.
  • Maybe if we change our name they won’t remember what we did: Lordstown Motors, now rebranded as Nu Ride, has risen from the ashes of bankruptcy with a vendetta against tech giant Foxconn, accusing it of playing the villain in the downfall of an American dream.

Other unmissable TechCrunch stories …

Every week, there’s always a few stories I want to share with you that somehow don’t fit into the categories above. It’d be a shame if you missed ’em, so here’s a random grab bag of goodies for ya:

  • I’ll buy your shares for $0: SpaceX has devised a cunning plan to keep its employees in check with some eyebrow-raising stock award conditions. Imagine leaving the company only to find SpaceX can buy back your hard-earned shares at a bargain bin price, or worse, ban you from cashing out altogether if they’ve deemed you’ve been naughty.
  • Pull up yer pants: Gumroad, the once go-to e-commerce haven for creators of all stripes, has decided to tighten the leash on NSFW content, leaving creators of the more risqué variety scrambling for their digital lives. The culprit behind this sudden prudishness? The ever-watchful eyes of payment processors like Stripe and PayPal.
  • So about that artificial general intelligence thing: When the sensationalist press asks for a timeframe, it is often baiting AI professionals into putting a timeline on the end of humanity — or at least the current status quo. Needless to say, AI CEOs aren’t always eager to tackle the subject, but Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang shared some thoughts this week.
  • Robo-spam takes a new dimension: OpenAI’s GPT Store, a marketplace bustling with custom chatbots designed to tackle a myriad of tasks, seems to have turned into the Wild West of AI, where moderation takes a backseat and copyright lines blur.
  • Walk this way, talk this way: Pilot season has officially begun for the world of humanoid robotics. Last year, Amazon began testing Agility’s Digit robots in select fulfillment centers, while this January, Figure announced a deal with BMW. Now Apptronik is getting in on the action, courtesy of a partnership with Mercedes-Benz.

Subscribe to Startups Weekly and the other TechCrunch newsletters. If you have hardware startup news or tips, get in touch with Haje!

More TechCrunch

Safe Superintelligence (SSI), the AI startup co-founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, has raised over $1 billion in capital from investors including NFDG (an investment partnership run by…

Ilya Sutskever’s startup, Safe Superintelligence, raises $1B

The American sports betting market produced $10.9 billion in revenue in 2023 for casinos, sportsbooks and iGaming, according to the American Gambling Association. One of the reasons this industry is…

DubClub wants amateur sports betters to win more

New climate tech VC firms have emerged in recent years, but existing ones are also raising larger funds. Founded in 2007, Dutch firm SET Ventures is one of the latter.…

Dutch clean energy investor SET Ventures lands new €200 million fund, which will go toward digital tech

Revefi connects to a company’s data stores and databases (e.g. Snowflake, Databricks and so on) and attempts to automatically detect and troubleshoot data-related issues.

Revefi seeks to automate companies’ data operations

If you build an AI search product, you compete with Google. But Google has a lot easier time answering queries with a single, simple answer, such as “how many is…

You.com ‘refocuses’ from AI search to deeper productivity agents with new $50M round

Featured Article

reMarkable’s Paper Pro adds color, light and more but keeps the focus on ‘focus’

The $499 Paper Pro — a new naming convention to indicate it is a higher-end alternative to the now-$379 reMarkable 2, not a direct successor — is momentous for its addition of both color and a “frontlight,” though both features are what you might call muted.

reMarkable’s Paper Pro adds color, light and more but keeps the focus on ‘focus’

Good news for Microsoft: The U.K.’s antitrust regulator says that the tech titan’s high-profile acquihire of the team behind AI startup Inflection doesn’t cause competition concerns, and thus it won’t…

UK regulator greenlights Microsoft’s Inflection acquihire, but also designates it a merger

In the summer of 2023, Lyft was contemplating the sale of its micromobility business after receiving strong interest from prospective buyers. Today, the ride-hail company is doubling down on its…

Why Lyft’s CEO says ‘it would be insane’ not to go all in on bikeshare

Spotify is launching daylist globally. It’s a personalized playlist that evolves throughout the day depending on your listening habits. This rollout comes after the company introduced it first to English-speaking…

Spotify launches its evolving playlist, daylist, globally

Digital lending platforms have become an easy and swift alternative source of credit for microenterprises and individuals overlooked by traditional banking institutions. These platforms have turned into a lifeline for…

Impact investors FMO and BlueOrchard back Ghana’s digital lender Fido in $30M Series B round

Indian online pharmacy startup PharmEasy, once valued at a lofty $5.6 billion, is still about 92% below its peak valuation, according to new estimates by its investor Janus Henderson. The…

PharmEasy still 92% below its peak $5.6 billion valuation, investor estimates

Palm launched in 2023 with the goal of making cash management for enterprise treasury teams easier.

From their experiences at Uber and PayPal, Palm founders want to make moving cash easier for big companies

Canva, the design platform, is increasing prices steeply for some customers. And it’s blaming the move in part on generative AI. In the U.S., some Canva Teams subscribers on older…

Canva has increased prices for its Teams product

Featured Article

Apple Event 2024: iPhone 16, Apple Intelligence and all the other expected ‘Glowtime’ reveals

Apple’s Glowtime iPhone event will include the iPhone 16, but may also feature new AirPods, a new Apple Watch and possibly even new Macs.

Apple Event 2024: iPhone 16, Apple Intelligence and all the other expected ‘Glowtime’ reveals

Snap is testing a “simplified version of Snapchat,” CEO Evan Spiegel wrote in a letter to employees published on Snap’s website Tuesday. The CEO says the simplified version aims to…

Snap CEO says the company is testing a ‘simplified’  Snapchat

Prevention is better than cure, as the saying goes. Today, a splashy startup that has taken that concept to heart — literally and figuratively — is expanding. Neko Health was…

Neko Health, the body-scanning AI health startup from Spotify’s Daniel Ek, opens in London

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) published a report about increasing fraud at Bitcoin ATMs. These ATMs allow people to turn their cash into crypto, but they’ve become a tool for…

Bitcoin ATMs are a hotbed for scams, FTC says

Volkswagen is taking its ChatGPT voice assistant experiment on the road. Or more specifically, to vehicles it sells in the United States.  The German automaker announced in January at CES…

Volkswagen is rolling out its ChatGPT assistant to the US

From idea to IPO, Disrupt charts startups at every stage on the roadmap to their next breakthrough. TechCrunch will gather some of the startup world’s leading companies — but our…

Learn startup best practices with MongoDB, Venture Backed, InterSystems and others at Disrupt 2024

Android introduced five updates on Tuesday as part of its latest release of the mobile operating system. Available for smartphones, tablets and Wear OS watches, the new features include audio…

Android’s latest update improves text-to-speech, Circle to Search, earthquake alerts and more

Google announced on Tuesday it’s releasing Android 15 and making its source code available ahead of the coming consumer launch, which will bring the new mobile operating system to supported…

Android 15 will be available on supported Pixel devices in the coming weeks

As new users downloaded the app, Bluesky jumped to becoming the app to No. 1 in Brazil over the weekend, ahead of Meta’s X competitor, Instagram Threads.

Bluesky continues to soar, adding 2M more new users in a matter of days

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at a new real estate startup that’s making big waves with its offering, Klarna and Affirm’s financials, a neobank focused on immigrants…

The flat-rate real estate startup that’s got big players worried and BNPL’s turning a corner

Instagram’s latest feature aims to boost user interaction within Stories. The social media platform now allows followers to comment on each other’s Stories, making the experience more community-focused, akin to…

As more Instagram users engage with Stories, the app adds a comments feature

Curious about how top venture capitalists are positioning themselves for the next wave in the crypto market?  Dragonfly Capital’s Haseeb Qureshi, Galaxy Ventures’ Will Nuelle, and NFX’s Morgan Beller will…

Dragonfly Capital, Galaxy Ventures and NFX share insights on crypto scaling and strategy at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Get ready for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, our signature event for startups of all stages, happening at Moscone West in San Francisco from October 28-30. This year, we’re expecting a massive…

Announcing the final agenda for the Builders Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Spotter, the startup that provides financial solutions to content creators, announced Tuesday the launch of its new AI-powered creative suite. Dubbed Spotter Studio, the solution aims to support YouTubers throughout the…

Spotter launches AI tools to help YouTubers brainstorm video ideas, thumbnails and more

This second fund is significant because Gupta expanded it beyond a corporate fund with one main LP — Prudential Financial — into one supported by a number of financial and…

Former Citi, Battery VC has new $378M fund to back financial services and enterprise startups

The oil and fracking giant says it is “working to identify effects” of the ongoing cyberattack on its oil and fracking operations.

Halliburton confirms data was stolen in ongoing cyberattack

Is Elon’s rumble in the Amazonian jungle on course for a technical knockout? Over the weekend, the Brazilian high court voted to uphold a ban on X that another judge issued…

Elon Musk’s Brazil battle wages on