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Equity

There's always something happening to OpenAI's board

Equity

TechCrunch

Founders, Silicon Valley, Finance, Ipo, Vc, Technology, Business News, Startups, Business, Venture Capital, News, Stock Market, Entrepreneurship, Techcrunch

4.2365 Ratings

🗓️ 12 July 2024

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Mary Ann was off this week, but Kirsten took the lead with Becca Szkutak and Rebecca Bellan in the co-host seats. This episode is packed with deals, antitrust musings, AI and more, so let's get into it! For deals of the week, we kicked things off with a look at why one of the many lawsuits Musk faces after firing 6,000 Twitter employees after his 2022 takeover was dismissed. The result may be good news for Musk, he still faces at least one other lawsuit from CEO Parag Agrawal, who along with three other former Twitter Inc. executives are seeking $128 million in severance payments from X Corp. Next up, Rebecca broke down Microsoft’s decision to leave its observer seat on OpenAI’s board, after which the AI company will no longer host observers. The legacy tech giant said it has seen enough progress being made at OpenAI and is “confident in its direction,” but we’re not exactly buying that Microsoft would give up such a coveted spot so easily. We suspect that the decision was fueled by ongoing antitrust scrutiny of Big Tech’s influence over emerging AI players. Last but not least, Becca talked about Duolingo’s deal to buy Hobbes, a Detroit-based animation and motion design studio. Hobbes is a company that Duolingo has worked with for years on several features, including Duolingo Music, so it’s interesting to see the acquisition happen at this stage. Maybe Hobbes was having money trouble and needed a lifeline? Either way, Duolingo is calling this an acqui-hire deal. While Hobbes isn't an AI company, we make a prediction that we'll see similar acquisitions of smaller AI startups as larger companies scoop up the AI startups they're already working with. Getting into our themes this week, we’ve been noticing a few stories lately that investigate what happens when a company’s founder or owner dies. Today, Rebecca went over the story of Unseen Capital, whose founder Kayode Owens passed away in 2021 just after raising $30 million. The VC’s mission was to help early-stage healthcare companies started by underrepresented founders. Pharma company Eli Lilly was one of Unseen’s LPs, and in a move to protect its own investment while signaling confidence in Unseen’s mission, has brokered a deal for Seae Ventures to acquire the unmoored VC. It’s a good fit, as Seae Ventures is another diversity-focused VC firm. Meanwhile, a recent TC story on deep tech funding caught the Equity pod’s attention. The gist: a recent survey of 30 deep tech VCs from eight countries found that very technical CEOs raise larger rounds. The survey also noted that pre-seed and Series A deep tech hardware rounds were bigger in 2023 than in 2022. While the survey seems to provide a rosy picture for technical CEOs, it does not provide a complete one. For instance, the survey focused on Europe, which got the Equity crew musing about whether those same stats would hold up in North America. And it followed rounds up through Series A. The Equity pod wondered if the results changed in Series B rounds and beyond. Plus, we think the rise of deep tech-focused funds may also play a role here too.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome back to Equity, Runch's flagship podcast about the

0:15.4

business of startups. Today is Friday, July 12th. I'm Kirsten Kaurasek

0:21.0

transportation editor here at Tech Crunch and joining me today is Senior TC

0:26.2

reporter on the Venture Beat, Becca Skutak, how's it going, Becca?

0:30.4

I am hanging in there. How are you? Great. Hangin in there. Are you fresh off of the

0:36.9

vacation beat? I'm fresh off the vacation beat and we are dealing with our

0:41.3

second heat wave of the summer already.

0:43.2

So I saw in a newsletter yesterday

0:45.1

and I thought it was very accurately described.

0:47.7

Walking outside right now feels like walking into someone's mouth.

0:50.4

It's awful.

0:51.4

That's so descriptive. It's awful. So descriptive and horrifying all at the same time. So good luck with that. Thanks. We're also joined by a senior TC reporter on the transportation desk,

1:03.7

Rebecca Bellin.

1:04.4

Rebecca, how are you?

1:05.8

I'm good.

1:06.5

I'm better hearing that little tidbit.

1:08.0

That was funny, but I was a little bummed this morning

1:10.0

because I read that Elon has volunteered his sperm

1:12.4

to colonize Mars, so it just hasn't left my head.

1:15.2

Oh, yeah. Reportedly. Lots of visual, yeah, lots of imagery there.

1:22.0

But I think that we should maybe instead talk about

1:24.8

venture deals and other things than Elon sperm. So we've got a lot to cover on the

...

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