Morning Must-Reads Thereâs something about France: According to a recent report from Runa Capital, of the 50 listed âtopâ commercial open source software companies (COSS entities), seven are based in France. Thatâs the most of any European country, even counting the UK. The U.S. racks up more than 20 entries, about the same as Europe as a whole. India taps in with three entrants, to add one more datapoint. Uzbekistan gets its first unicorn: With a $114 million Series A, Uzum is now worth $1.16 billion, making it Uzbekistanâs first unicorn. The company started off as an e-commerce marketplace, as the country previously had a shocking lack of e-commerce services, and has now diversified into fintech and food deliveries as well. Cyeraâs investors bet that protecting data against AI will be big: Cybersecurity startup Cyera (pronounced âSierraâ) is near to closing a $300 million round, tripling its valuation to about $1.5 billion. AI is neat and companies want to use it, but keeping data secure and properly governed as AI is increasingly used by businesses is no easy feat. Cyera raised $100 million just last year, so another round this soon implies that something big is brewing at the startup. This is what I have been waiting for: The LLM boom has become the enterprise and consumer software story, but itâs worth remembering that these models can do a lot more. For example, the smart people building robots have figured out that robots can use large language models to solve their own problems and handle more complex tasks. Excellent! When can I buy one to take out the trash? Profluent wants to commercialize AI-designed proteins: Sticking to the theme of using AI to do more than farm engagement, how about using AI to âcreate the 3D structures of artificial proteins?â Of course, weâve seen other projects with similar goals from companies like Nvidia and Meta, but with $35 million in fresh capital, Profluent wants to bring the nascent tech out of the lab and into the market. New Telegram SMS login service criticized: Telegram just launched a feature that âgrants users a free premium membership in exchange for allowing the instant messaging app to utilize their phone number as a relay for sending one-time SMS passwords.â And you should think thrice before signing up for it, because it is a privacy nightmare, as TechCrunch reports. Building an electric bus network from scratch is no mean feat: Scottish startup Ember has just landed $14 million to build one of U.K.âs first all-electric intercity bus networks. With 38 buses in its fleet, the startup now can service a wider area and more people. The company charges its buses today in Dundee, where it has wind-power inputs. Itâs going to need more charging power, which is a great problem for Ember to tackle. |