Webdesk: In December and January, US and British venture capitalists raced to Paris to buy a stake in a new artificial intelligence startup that might change work.
Dust, a two-person startup, pursued. It was unincorporated. Reuters reported that it rejected a significant offer from prominent investment company Coatue Management.
Two people indicated Sequoia Capital led a $5 million “seed” fundraising round. Dust’s AI technologies boost white-collar efficiency.
Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp.’s quick AI push and billions of dollars spent to acquire an edge have increased Silicon Valley competition. Startups competing with Big Tech are sealing deals in days instead of weeks. It brightens a slow venture-capital market.
“Large Internet companies with significant investments in AI are not going to allow their incumbent distribution advantage slip away easy,” noted Sequoia Capital partner Konstantine Buhler, who managed the Dust transaction and is seeking productivity apps since “disruption is inevitable.”
Generative artificial intelligence, popularized by OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot, is attracting investment. After training on prior data, such technology can generate any text, image, or other content.
“VCs think this the new internet,” a US generative AI founder told Reuters.
According to PitchBook, such businesses have raised $5.9 billion since 2022, up from $1.5 billion in 2020. Venture investors said AI startups, especially top early-stage founders, remain attractive despite Silicon Valley Bank’s demise.
Khosla Ventures founder Samir Kaul said the firm is seeing more generative AI pitches than six months ago.
Kaul claimed venture investors now have “herd mentality.” That means “failing enterprises will get funded and give the entire sector, which is really promising, a black eye.”
ChatGPT attracted enormous funding because “90% of venture capitalists are risk-averse. They don’t plunge in until they see an application, “he added.