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From TechCrunch
By Anna Heim
June 7, 2024
Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje’s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Anna will be covering for him this week. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday.
As the end of 0% interest rates keeps taking its toll, SoftBank-backed Norway-based online supermarket delivery startup Oda has confirmed 150 layoffs and a refocus on Norway and Sweden, where it hopes to reach profitability next year.
People being let go is never good news, but Oda co-founder Jon Kåre Stene, now a partner at VC firm Skyfall Ventures, hopes that this “could spark off the birth of several new startups in the Norwegian tech scene or strengthen companies already set out on a journey.” Europe already has several startup factories — think Skype — and now it could be Norway’s turn.
Hardware is hard, episode 234: We already knew that Humane’s Ai Pin launch was going anything but smoothly. Now the startup urges customers to stop using its charging case due to battery fire concerns. This is “out of an abundance of caution” and based on a single complaint, according to Humane, but it is unlikely to help its case.
Reinventing the walkie-talkie: The two co-founders of French startup ten ten are getting little sleep these days as their original social app went viral, with 1 million downloads in their home country and 6 million globally.
Sued, fined, and evicted: AI mortgage startup LoanSnap isn’t doing well. With backers such as Reid Hoffman, Richard Branson and the Chainsmokers, it has employees deeply concerned about its future as worries keep mounting.
Falling from height: The inside story of Fisker’s collapse is a fascinating one, and TechCrunch has it. Sean O’Kane worked on this for weeks, and the result is a tale of hubris, power struggles, and the repeated failure to set up basic processes that are foundational for any automaker.
We will dance again: Co-founder and CTO of Firefly, Joseph “Sefi” Genis, was among the hundreds murdered by Hamas on October 7. Now the Israeli startup is forging on.
Solutions by Text (SBT), a company that gives people a way to pay their bills and apply for loans via text messaging, raised $110 million in funding. But as TechCrunch’s Mary Ann Azevedo noted, “this is not your typical startup raising capital.” The company was bootstrapped from its creation in 2008 to 2021.
Another difference between SBT and the average startup is that it is EBITDA positive and working toward full profitability this year, according to its CEO, David Baxter, who took over in 2021.
Founded by brothers Danny and Mike Cantrell, the company took a turn under Baxter’s helm.
“We really have transformed the business from more of a founder-led family, lifestyle type of a business, doing roughly 20ish million messages a month to about 150 to 200 million messages a month,” Baxter told TechCrunch.
Hearing of the Ticketmaster antitrust lawsuit made some among us wonder if this could give hope to ticketing startups.
And now Ticketmaster owner Live Nation confirms Ticketmaster was hacked. If your personal data was caught in the breach, that’s not great. But if that’s another step toward getting alternatives, maybe there’s a silver lining.
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Sesame, the startup behind the viral virtual assistant Maya, releases its base AI model
AI company Sesame has released the base model that powers Maya, the impressively realistic voice assistant. The model, which is 1 billion parameters in size (“parameters” referring to individual components of the model), is under an Apache 2.0 license, meaning it can be used commercially with few restrictions. Called CSM-1B, the model generates “RVQ audio codes” from text and audio inputs, according to Sesame’s description on the AI dev platform Hugging Face. RVQ refers to “residual vector quan
Mar 13, 2025
Y Combinator’s police surveillance darling Flock Safety raises $275M at $7.5B valuation
Flock Safety and one of its long-time VCs, Bedrock Capital, announced Thursday that the startup raised a fresh $275 million at a $7.5 billion valuation. Flock makes computer vision-enabled video surveillance technology used by law enforcement as well as businesses, property management companies, and so on. It’s best known for its automatic license plate recognition tech, but Flock also makes gunshot detection tech marketed to schools, and recently acquired public safety drone company Aerodome.
Mar 13, 2025
Y Combinator urges the White House to support Europe’s Digital Markets Act
Y Combinator, one of the world’s most prolific startup accelerators, sent a letter on Wednesday urging the Trump administration to openly support Europe’s Digital Markets Act (DMA), a wide-ranging piece of legislation that aims to crack open Big Tech’s market power. The DMA designates six tech companies as “gatekeepers” to the internet — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta, and Microsoft — and limits these technology kingpins from engaging in anticompetitive tactics on their platforms, in
Mar 13, 2025
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