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From TechCrunch
By Marina Temkin
July 12, 2024
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.
This week we’re looking at an AI startup that wants to help people get creative with video; Kudos, which raised $3 million to help get rid of diaper rash; and VCs backing other VCs.
Investors keep pouring dollars and euros into startups that can help protect the world from aggressive nations. Helsing, a defense startup that uses AI to improve battlefield decisions, has raised €450 million ($487 million). Some of that money will go toward a new entity in Estonia to protect the Baltic states from its dangerous neighbor, Russia. According to Bloomberg’s sources, Helsing’s valuation jumped from $1.85 billion last year to $5.4 billion. Meanwhile, some U.S. venture funds with defense tech strategies are arming themselves with new types of investors: veterans and ex-Department of Defense officials.
Speaking of soaring valuations, the latest numbers from PitchBook data show that startup prices have hit an all-time high in 2024. Is it time to rejoice about the end of the downturn? Not so fast. Turns out that prices are up only for the best companies. Everyone else is still struggling to raise capital or is finding a way to obfuscate poor valuations.
Turning AI foe into friend: While Hollywood artists may be nervous about AI tech stealing their livelihoods, DreamFlare, a startup founded by a document filmmaker and an ex-Googler, wants creators to make more content and a nice income with AI. The studio will help animation artists work alongside an experienced creative team on story development and then will distribute the videos through its online platform.
Draw your anxiety away: Fears of war and the possibility of AI replacing people’s jobs are only adding to the existing mental health crisis. Scribble Journey created an app that helps users explore their emotions through art therapy.
The U.S. is short on tech and other high-skilled professionals. Importing that talent from abroad is one of the answers. But getting a work visa approved by the U.S. Department of State may not be just a function of limited slots. Immigration lawyers sometimes give wrong advice to individuals looking to work in the country. The Kyrgyzstan-born, Harvard-educated Aizada Marat founded Alma, an AI-powered legal tech startup that speeds up and simplifies the visa obtainment process for technologists, founders and researchers.
Sending money abroad: Nala, an African payments startup, raised a $40 million Series A round led by Acrew Capital. The huge round shows that international remittances could be a huge business.
Data-powered diagnoses: Busy doctors don’t always have time to review every data point in a patient’s chart, occasionally leading to missed diagnoses. Regard, a startup that just raised $61 million at a $350 million valuation, does this for physicians with the help of AI.
Bye-bye, diaper rash: Baby not sleeping well? He or she may hate the feeling of plastic on the bends of their diaper. Give Kudos, a startup that lines its diapers with 100% cotton and raised $3 million, a try.
Index Ventures restocks: Brand name funds seem to have no problem raising huge funds these days. Index Ventures announced $2.3 billion in fresh capital. The firm’s fundraise is slightly smaller than its previous vintage, but Index says it’s an appropriate amount for the current market.
Look to the stars: German-based Alpine Space Ventures has raised a $184 million (€170 million) fund to invest in companies serving the space industry in the U.S. and Europe.
VCs backing VCs: Kearny Jackson raised a $65 million third fund from pre-seed and seed B2B SaaS and fintech infrastructure startups. The firm’s LPs include Sequoia, Bain Capital Ventures, Menlo Ventures and Marc Andreessen.
Arianna Huffington teamed up with Sam Altman on a new health coaching startup, Thrive AI Health. The company is backed by Huffington’s wellness company Thrive and the OpenAI Startup Fund. The startup will offer an AI-powered assistant that nudges people to lead a healthier lifestyle. The question is, of course, will it be as successful as a human coach in getting individuals to exercise and eat their vegetables? Another question is how much funding Thrive AI Health received to develop its capabilities.
Lately’s new gamified app helps people arrive on time
A new app called Lately launched on the App Store a few weeks ago, targeting people with ADHD to help them arrive on time and rewarding them for doing so. The service is designed to help users manage their travel plans by notifying them when it’s time to leave for a trip, sending reminders 30 minutes, 10 minutes, and 5 minutes before departure. It also features Live Activities on iPhone and Apple Watch that display a countdown to leave. To encourage timely departures, Lately employs a point rew
Apr 26, 2025
The OpenAI mafia: 15 of the most notable startups founded by alumni
Move over, PayPal mafia: There’s a new tech mafia in Silicon Valley. As the startup behind ChatGPT, OpenAI is arguably the biggest AI player in town. Its meteoric rise to a $300 billion valuation has spurred many employees to leave the AI giant to create startups of their own. The hype around OpenAI is so high that some of these startups, like Ilya Sutskever’s Safe Superintelligence and Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab, have been able to raise billions of dollars without even launching a pro
Apr 26, 2025
Deel files countersuit against Rippling as rivalry escalates
In the latest development of an increasingly public dispute between HR and payroll services rivals, Deel has filed a countersuit against Rippling. To recap: Rippling publicly announced on March 17 that it was suing Deel over alleged corporate espionage, with accusations ranging from violation of the RICO racketeering act (typically used to prosecute organized crime) to misappropriation of trade secrets and unfair competition. Deel is now slamming that lawsuit as part of a “campaign to try to i
Apr 25, 2025