VCs are still pouring billions into generative AI startups

Date:

Share post:


Investments in generative AI startups — those that are creating AI-powered products to generate text, audio, video and more — aren’t slowing down. But they’re being consolidated into a shrinking number of early-stage ventures.

In the first half of 2023, from January to July 16, 225 startups raised $12.3 billion from VCs, according to Crunchbase data shared with TechCrunch. Should the trend maintain, generative AI companies are on track to match or exceed the roughly $21.8 billion they raised in 2023.

Here’s how the H1 2024 total broke down by stage:

  • 198 angel/seed deals: $500 million
  • 39 early-stage deals: $8.7 billion
  • 18 late-stage deals: $3.1 billion

Early-stage startups were the clear winners, like Elon Musk’s xAI (which raised $6 billion in May), China’s Moonshot AI ($1 billion in February), Mistral AI ($502.6 billion in June), Glean ($203.2 million in February) and Cognition ($175 million in April). According to Chris Metinko, an analyst and senior reporter at Crunchbase, investors appear to be betting on big startups they see as having a high chance of success while letting those they’re less sure about “wither away” at the earlier stages.

“Some VCs expect the legal and regulatory dilemmas AI companies could face in both the U.S. and overseas to lead to a slowdown in the flood of AI funding,” Metinko told TechCrunch. “Others point to the fact that when the mobile revolution occurred more than a decade ago, the biggest winners when it came to the foundational infrastructure layer ended up being well-established tech companies.”

To Metinko’s point, the fate of many generative AI businesses — even the best-funded ones — looks murky.

Generative AI models are typically trained on data like images and text sourced from public web pages, and companies assert that fair use shields them from legal challenges in cases where that data turns out to be copyrighted. But it’s not clear yet whether the courts will ultimately decide in favor of generative AI companies, which is probably why some have begun to ink licensing deals with copyright holders.

Regardless of the outcome of any one court case, high-quality training data is becoming harder and more expensive to obtain as startups exhaust the web’s supply and more creators opt to block crawlers from scraping their data. (One analysis estimates that the market for AI training data will grow from $2.5 billion to $30 billion within a decade.) The process of training models isn’t getting any easier or cheaper, either: Per a recent Stanford report, OpenAI’s GPT-4 cost $78 million to train while Google Gemini’s price tag came in at $191 million.

Unsurprisingly given the substantial upfront investment required to build flagship models, few generative AI startups are profitable — not even big guns such as OpenAI and Anthropic. According to The Information, OpenAI, which is reportedly generating around $3.4 billion in revenue, could end up losing $5 billion this year.

Investors in generative AI are playing the long game, it’d seem — particularly big tech investors like Google, Amazon and Nvidia, which see generative AI investments as strategic bets. But could the bubble burst soon? If generative AI startups aren’t able to overcome the existential challenges facing them, that seems like a real possibility.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Sam Altman disputes Marc Andreessen’s description of AI meetings with Biden administration

Famed investor Marc Andreessen recently talked about meetings with Biden administration staff who gave him the impression...

EV startup Canoo places remaining employees on a ‘mandatory unpaid break’

Struggling electric van startup Canoo has placed its remaining employees on what it’s calling a “mandatory unpaid...

After causing outrage on the first day of Y Combinator, AI code editor PearAI lands $1M seed

On the first day of Y Combinator’s winter 2024 session – right after orientation and a photo...

Third member of LockBit ransomware gang has been arrested

U.S. prosecutors in New Jersey on Friday publicly announced charges against Rostislav Panev, 51, a dual Russian-Israeli...

Feds clear the way for robotaxis without steering wheels and pedals

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) on Friday proposed a new national framework that could make...

VCs pledge not to take money from Russia or China, and Databricks raises a humongous round

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of...

Nvidia clears regulatory hurdle to acquire Run:ai

Chip company Nvidia gets the green light from the European Union to complete its acquisition of Run:ai. The...

Google is expanding Gemini’s in-depth research mode to 40 languages

Google said Friday that the company is expanding Gemini’s latest in-depth research mode to 40 more languages. The...