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Safe Superintelligence (SSI), a startup co-founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, has secured $1 billion in funding just three months after it was founded. The company, which aims to develop “safe” artificial general intelligence (AGI) systems that surpass human intelligence, has achieved a valuation of approximately $5 billion despite having no product and only ten employees. The funding round, led by top-tier venture capital firms including Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, DST Global, and SV Angel, shows that AI ventures are still attracting massive cash. It defies skepticism surrounding investment in the AI sector. When generative AI went ‘mainstream’
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Safe Superintelligence (SSI), a startup co-founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, has secured $1 billion in funding just three months after it was founded.
The company, which aims to develop “safe” artificial general intelligence (AGI) systems that surpass human intelligence, has achieved a valuation of approximately $5 billion despite having no product and only ten employees.
The funding round, led by top-tier venture capital firms including Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, DST Global, and SV Angel, shows that AI ventures are still attracting massive cash.
It defies skepticism surrounding investment in the AI sector.
When generative AI went ‘mainstream’ in late 2022, people thought it would change the world in the flick of a switch.
It has, to some extent, but it’s still early days for investors. AI companies founded just months ago have attracted billions of dollars in cash, but paying it back might take longer than expected as companies attempt to monetize their products.
Brushing all of that aside, there’s still a cool $1 billion for SSI. Sutskever said himself when he found it would have no trouble raising cash.
Ex-OpenAI co-founder Sutskever co-founded SSI in June alongside serial AI investors Nat Friedman, Daniel Gross, and Daniel Levy, a former OpenAI researcher. Sutskever was part of a series of high-profile exits from OpenAI.
The company plans to use the newly acquired funds to secure computing resources and expand its team, with offices in Palo Alto, California, and Tel Aviv, Israel.
“We’ve identified a new mountain to climb that’s a bit different from what I was working on previously,” Sutskever told the Financial Times.
“We’re not trying to go down the same path faster. If you do something different, then it becomes possible for you to do something special.”
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