Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Facebook’s Insider Content Moderation for the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Waymo launches robotaxi services at San Antonio International Airport

Google now lets you direct avatars via messages in the Vids app

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Google now lets you direct avatars via messages in the Vids app

    3 April 2026

    Microsoft takes on AI rivals with three new flagship models

    3 April 2026

    Salesforce announces a heavy overhaul for Slack, with 30 new features

    2 April 2026

    Meta’s gas glut could power South Dakota

    2 April 2026

    Anthropic is one month old

    1 April 2026
  • Apps

    ElevenLabs releases a new AI-powered music production app

    3 April 2026

    Flipboard’s new ‘social sites’ help publishers and creators tap into the open social web

    3 April 2026

    Exclusive: Beehiiv expands into podcasting, targeting Patreon

    2 April 2026

    A new dating app, Sonder, has a deliberately annoying sign-up process (and it works)

    2 April 2026

    Truecaller Caller ID app reaches 500 million monthly users

    1 April 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    Cash app launches ‘pay later’ feature for P2P transfers

    3 April 2026

    Doss raises $55 million for AI inventory management that connects to ERP

    24 March 2026

    Despite stiff competition, Kalshi, Polymarket CEOs back $35m VC fund projections

    23 March 2026

    Amid legal turmoil, Kalshi is temporarily banned in Nevada

    20 March 2026

    Nominations for the Startup Battlefield 200 are still open

    19 March 2026
  • Hardware

    Nothing’s AI device design reportedly includes smart glasses and headphones

    2 April 2026

    Cognichip wants AI to design the chips that power AI, and it just raised $60 million to test

    2 April 2026

    Meta launches two new Ray-Ban glasses designed for prescription wearers

    1 April 2026

    Whoop’s valuation just tripled to $10 billion

    1 April 2026

    The Pixel 10a doesn’t have a camera bump, and it’s great

    30 March 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    OpenAI acquires TBPN, the popular founder-led business talk show

    2 April 2026

    Roku is launching a standalone app for Howdy, its $2.99 ​​streaming service

    31 March 2026

    SXSW is making a comeback as a premier networking, ideas festival for founders and VCs

    30 March 2026

    ‘Project Hail Mary’ becomes Amazon MGM’s biggest box office hit

    30 March 2026

    Sora’s shutdown could be a reality check moment for video AI

    29 March 2026
  • Security

    Telehealth giant Hims & Hers says its customer support system was breached

    3 April 2026

    Money transfer app Duc has exposed thousands of driver’s licenses and passports to the open web

    2 April 2026

    Apple releases security patch for older iPhones and iPads to protect against DarkSword attacks

    2 April 2026

    WhatsApp is alerting hundreds of users who installed a fake app made by a government-run spyware maker

    1 April 2026

    Health data giant CareCloud says hackers accessed patient medical records

    1 April 2026
  • Startups

    Facebook’s Insider Content Moderation for the Age of Artificial Intelligence

    3 April 2026

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems relies on magnets for short-term revenue

    3 April 2026

    Different teams start with different VCs

    2 April 2026

    YC’s troubled startup Delve’s reputation just got worse

    2 April 2026

    StrictlyVC San Francisco is less than a month away

    1 April 2026
  • Transportation

    Waymo launches robotaxi services at San Antonio International Airport

    3 April 2026

    United’s mobile app now shows TSA wait times at select airports

    3 April 2026

    Tesla’s cheaper vehicles aren’t helping its declining sales

    2 April 2026

    The Rivian spinoff will also build autonomous delivery vehicles for DoorDash

    2 April 2026

    Uber and WeRide are ramping up robotaxi operations in Dubai

    1 April 2026
  • Venture

    Toyota’s Woven Capital appoints new CIO and COO in push to find ‘future of mobility’

    1 April 2026

    Exclusive: Runway Launches $10M Fund, Builders Program to Back Early-Stage AI Startups

    31 March 2026

    Former Coatue Partner Raises Massive $65M Seed Fund for Enterprise AI Agent Startup

    31 March 2026

    From Moon Hotels to Cattle Grazing: 8 Startup Investors Hunted at YC Demo Day

    28 March 2026

    16 of the most interesting startups from the YC W26 Demo Day

    27 March 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»Maybe count to 10 before tweeting
Startups

Maybe count to 10 before tweeting

techtost.comBy techtost.com3 February 202407 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Maybe Count To 10 Before Tweeting
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly roundup of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to receive it in your inbox every Friday.

Garry Tan heads Y Combinator, the most powerful startup program in the world. At the end of last week, he tweeted – I mean, X-ed – some really nasty shit, telling politicians to “die slow”. She has since deleted the tweet, but the drama was the talk of the town this week.

However, Tan’s alleged drunken tyranny served as a welcome distraction from another flurry of tech layoffs last week (you’re not imagining things – it’s real). The layoffs hit very close to home this week, as some of our colleagues at TechCrunch were let go, including some close friends of mine that I’ve known and worked with for a decade. Our paths will meet again friends!

Okay, so what elsewhere go to the world of startups? Let’s dive in.

The most interesting startup stories this week

Image Credits: Plex

In a move that screams, “We’re almost there, promise!” Media streaming underdog Plex has raised $40 million in what looks like their largest ever funding round, in a round confusingly named Series C-3. The company is still chasing the profitability milestone, and with a strategy that seems to throw everything at the wall to see what sticks — from ad-supported content to social sharing features — Plex is betting big on becoming a major player in the game flow. Whether they cross the finish line of profitability or simply add more features, it remains a cliffhanger worthy of its own drama series. Maybe Plex will outsource it next.

In a masterclass in how to win no friends and influence regulators, Apple takes the crown with its dramatic response to regulatory compliance demands. With the grace of a sullen teenager, the company has reluctantly introduced changes required by laws like Europe’s Digital Markets Act, while fretting over the potential risks those changes could pose to users. Despite its vast resources, Apple chooses to play the victim, warning that these regulatory adjustments are detrimental to its user base, whom it apparently sees as incapable of making informed decisions. This approach not only risks burning bridges with developers, who are increasingly frustrated with Apple’s antics, but also threatens to tarnish its political goodwill.

Hold the Fitbit, define a disease: In a world obsessed with fitness tracking, Visible is saying, “Hold my wearable” and introducing disease tracking, because what we really need is a daily reminder of our chronic conditions. It’s like having a pocket-sized friend whispering, “Maybe not today,” every morning.

The most interesting fundraisers this week

Image Credits: Robotics Chef

“The fundraising cycle, once you start it, takes twice as long and requires three times the conversations,” Jesse Randall, the founder of the Sweater Ventures platform, tells Dominic-Madori in an interview. Here’s what you need to know to raise a Series A right now. (TC+)

Metronome, a startup that loves turning complicated billing into not-so-complicated, especially for AI companies, just closed $43 million in Series B funding. With roots in Dropbox and a client list that reads like a who’s who of technology (think OpenAI and Nvidia), make the transition from subscription to usage-based billing much less complicated. Their secret sauce? Metronome is riding high with 6x revenue growth while keeping its valuation a mystery.

Get the salsa, we already have the chips: In the world of AI chips, where the norm is throwing money at problems hoping something will stick, Rebellions just won a whopping $124 million to join the fray. Be that as it may, it’s an underdog story for the ages.

Can you figure out what the ‘bot is cooking?: In a world where flipping burgers by hand is 2023, Chef Robotics just raised $15 million to convince commercial kitchens that the future lies in assembling food by robots, not humans. Why chop onions when you can have a robot do it for you?

Manipulation in robots: Throwing money at AI security is the new black.

This week’s big trend: Layoffs. Again.

Aerial view of Silicon Valley from 30,000 feet. Image Credits: Getty Images / Charles O’Rear

I know, I know. We thought everything was behind us, but . . . Alas.

In the latest twist in layoff history, giants like Microsoft and Alphabet are flaunting their profits while at the same time shrinking their ranks. Meanwhile, in the scrappy underdog corner of startup land, venture capital is playing hardball to get them, leaving many startups stranded in a financial land. It’s a classic case of corporate “it was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” proving once again that in the tech world, the more things change, the more layoff announcements stay eerily similar.

You need to check the expense: In an ironic twist on corporate austerity, Brex, the expense management startup, went from swelling its employee roster to cutting it by nearly 20 percent in a desperate bid to stop eating up $17 million a month.

Raising cash during downsizing: Flexport, having already rained down $2.7 billion in funding, is eyeing another round of layoffs, proving that even with deep pockets, they don’t outshine the workforce. . . again, a few weeks after acquiring an additional $260 million from Shopify.

I have to pay the piper: PayPal has decided to cut its workforce again, this time cutting 9% of its workforce — or about 2,500 people. We can only assume that the strategy is based on the little-known fact that the best way to innovate is to ensure that there are fewer innovators around.

Other TechCrunch stories you shouldn’t miss. . .

Each week, there are always a few stories I want to share with you that somehow don’t fit into the above categories. It would be a shame if you missed them, so here’s a random goodie bag for you:

Back to work, toothy: In a world where even artificial intelligence can catch the ‘lazy bug’, OpenAI has decided to lower the prices and revamp the work ethic of the GPT-4 model, ensuring that it no longer avoids completing tasks. It looks like AI is quietly embodying a digital form of silent disruption, but fear not, the latest update promises a more diligent and cost-effective virtual colleague.

India’s First AI Unicorn: Ola founder Krutrim’s AI venture grabs headlines in record time with a cool $50 million funding round at a valuation north of a billion clams, claiming to be India’s first AI heavyweight without even breaking a sweat .

You creep, stop looking for it: X’s handling of Taylor Swift’s Deepfake Saga proved just how low the bar has been set for content moderation. This incident highlighted the comical inadequacy of current safeguards, essentially making the Wild West of the Internet look like a playground for the digitally inept.

More like departure: Arrival, the commercial EV startup once celebrated for its innovative micro-factory philosophy, has gone from a $13 billion valuation to potentially worth a spin, proving that all that glitters in the SPAC world isn’t gold. Now its shares are about to disappear from the Nasdaq.

I give up: Amazon’s grand plan to take over the world with robotic vacuums has hit a snag, and its $1.4 billion deal with iRobot is now just a pile of dust. Meanwhile, iRobot, facing a future without Amazon’s wallet, is starting to cut jobs and dream up the next big thing in home automation.

count garry tan plex Redundancies social media startups Startups Weekly tweeting
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleNiremia Collective Closes $22.5M Seed Fund Focused on Wellbeing Tech
Next Article Here is Apple’s official “jailbroken” iPhone for security researchers
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Facebook’s Insider Content Moderation for the Age of Artificial Intelligence

3 April 2026

Commonwealth Fusion Systems relies on magnets for short-term revenue

3 April 2026

Flipboard’s new ‘social sites’ help publishers and creators tap into the open social web

3 April 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Facebook’s Insider Content Moderation for the Age of Artificial Intelligence

3 April 2026

Waymo launches robotaxi services at San Antonio International Airport

3 April 2026

Google now lets you direct avatars via messages in the Vids app

3 April 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Cash app launches ‘pay later’ feature for P2P transfers

3 April 2026

Doss raises $55 million for AI inventory management that connects to ERP

24 March 2026

Despite stiff competition, Kalshi, Polymarket CEOs back $35m VC fund projections

23 March 2026
Startups

Facebook’s Insider Content Moderation for the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Commonwealth Fusion Systems relies on magnets for short-term revenue

Different teams start with different VCs

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.