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

Why Hiring the Weird Works

Sony and Honda abandon their joint EV project

Now you can transfer your conversations and personal information from other chatbots directly to Gemini

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

    Now you can transfer your conversations and personal information from other chatbots directly to Gemini

    27 March 2026

    Anthropic wins injunction against Trump administration over Defense Department saga

    27 March 2026

    A ‘pound of flesh’ from data centers: a senator’s response to AI job losses

    26 March 2026

    Mercor competitor Deccan AI raises $25 million, India experts report

    26 March 2026

    With Sift Stack, two former SpaceX engineers are bringing the software that helped launch rockets to the factory

    25 March 2026
  • Apps

    Google Translate’s real-time headset translation feature is expanding to iOS and more countries

    27 March 2026

    Mastodon is making its decentralized social network easier to use with its latest update

    27 March 2026

    WhatsApp can now design AI-generated replies based on your conversations

    26 March 2026

    Apple overhauls its app developer platform with 100 new metrics, more tools

    26 March 2026

    Talat’s AI meeting notes stay on your computer, not in the cloud

    25 March 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

    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

    Kalshi’s legal woes pile up as Arizona files first criminal charges for ‘illegal gambling operation’

    17 March 2026
  • Hardware

    Arm releases the first in-house chip in its 35-year history

    24 March 2026

    Ultrahuman boosts US push with Ring Pro as Oura tightens its grip

    24 March 2026

    Amazon is working on a new smartphone with Alexa at its core, the report says

    20 March 2026

    CEO Carl Pei says nothing about smartphone apps disappearing as they’re replaced by artificial intelligence agents

    18 March 2026

    MacBook Neo, AirPods Max 2, iPhone 17e and everything else Apple announced this month

    18 March 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Netflix confirms it’s raising prices again

    27 March 2026

    Spotify’s new SongDNA feature maps how your favorite songs are connected

    26 March 2026

    Roku’s Howdy $3 subscription service launches on Prime Video

    25 March 2026

    Apple Music partners with Ticketmaster to boost concert discovery

    25 March 2026

    Google TV’s new Gemini features keep fans updated on sports teams and more

    24 March 2026
  • Security

    A major hacking tool has leaked online, putting millions of iPhones at risk. Here’s what you need to know.

    27 March 2026

    Apple made strides with iOS 26 security, but leaked hacking tools still leave millions exposed to spyware attacks

    26 March 2026

    Convicted spyware boss hints Greek government was behind dozens of phone hacks

    26 March 2026

    Someone has publicly leaked an exploit kit that can hack millions of iPhones

    25 March 2026

    The FCC bans the importation of new consumer routers made abroad, citing security risks

    25 March 2026
  • Startups

    Why Hiring the Weird Works

    27 March 2026

    Silicon Valley’s two biggest dramas have crossed paths: LiteLLM and Delve

    27 March 2026

    Conntour Raises $7M From General Catalyst, YC To Build AI Search Engine For Security Video Systems

    26 March 2026

    Delve Made Security Compliant on LiteLLM, an AI Project Hit by Malware

    26 March 2026

    After spin-off, Y Combinator grad Glimpse raises $35 million led by a16z

    25 March 2026
  • Transportation

    Sony and Honda abandon their joint EV project

    27 March 2026

    A little-known Croatian startup is coming to the robotaxi market with the help of Uber

    27 March 2026

    A little-known Croatian startup is coming to the robotaxi market with the help of Uber

    26 March 2026

    Harbinger’s next product will be hybrid emergency vehicles

    25 March 2026

    Flighty’s new update gives you real-time alerts for airport disruptions

    25 March 2026
  • Venture

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

    27 March 2026

    BKR Capital Raises $14.5M (So Far) to Invest in Black Founders

    26 March 2026

    Driving GLP-1 Boom, VITL Raises $7.5M to Repair Cash Clinic Prescribing

    26 March 2026

    Arinna raises $4 million to solve the space energy problem

    25 March 2026

    Accel, Prosus select six ‘off-the-map’ startups for inaugural India team

    25 March 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»How European disability tech startups are leveraging artificial intelligence
Startups

How European disability tech startups are leveraging artificial intelligence

techtost.comBy techtost.com1 May 202407 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
How European Disability Tech Startups Are Leveraging Artificial Intelligence
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Making life better for people with disabilities is a laudable goal, but accessibility technology hasn’t traditionally been popular among VCs. In 2022, disability tech companies have attracted around them 4 billion dollars in early-stage investments, which was a fraction of it fintechrecruitment, for example.

One reason is that disability tech startups are often considered too niche to achieve business viability—at least at the scale that venture capital requires. By default, it’s supposed to be building for a minority. However, some startups in the space are also starting to serve the wider population — and throw in some artificial intelligence always helps.

Both cases are a balancing act: The larger business case must make sense without losing sight of the startup’s mission statement. AI, meanwhile, must be leveraged in a non-artificial way to pass the due diligence sniff test.

Some accessibility-focused startups understand these necessities, and their strategies are worth a look. Here are four European startups doing just that.

Visualfy

Image Credits: Visualfy

Visualfy harnesses artificial intelligence to improve the lives of people with hearing loss. The Spanish startup focuses on security and autonomy — it includes a sound recognition AI that recognizes fire alarms and the sound of a baby crying at home. “AI is critical to our business,” CEO Manel Alcaide told TechCrunch last month.

The company offers consumers an app that also serves as a companion to Visualfy Home, the hardware suite consisting of three detectors and a main device. It also entered the public domain with Visualfy Places — no fluke to boot recently raised funding by Spain’s national state railway company, Renfe.

One reason Visualfy is gaining traction on the B2B side is that public spaces are required to provide accessibility, especially when health and safety are on the line.

In an interview, Alcaide explained that the devices and PA systems that Visualfy will install in places like stadiums could also monitor air quality and other metrics. In the EU, meeting these other targets could help companies get subsidies while doing the right thing for deaf people.

The latter is still very much on the mind for Visualfy, which is incorporated as a B Corp and employs both hearing and non-hearing people. Inclusion of deaf people in all steps is an ethical stance – “nothing for us without us”. But it’s also common sense for better planning, Alcaide said.

Knisper

Audus - Knisper Group

Image Credits: Audus Technologies

People with total hearing impairment are a smaller part of a large and growing group. By 2050, 2.5 billion people are predicted to have some degree of hearing loss. Due to a combination of reasons such as stigma and cost, many will not wear hearing aids. This is the audience Dutch B2B startup Audus Technologies is targeting with its product, Knisper.

Knisper uses artificial intelligence to make speech easier to understand in environments such as cinemas, museums, public transport and work calls. In practice, this means separating the audio and mixing it into a cleaner track. It does this without increasing ambient noise (something not every hearing aid company can say), making it comfortable for anyone to listen to, even without hearing loss.

A former ENT doctor, Audus founder Marciano Ferrier explained that this could not be achieved with similar results before AI. Knisper was trained on thousands of videos in multiple languages, with variations such as background noise and distorted speech. That took work, but Audus is now leaving the development stage and focusing on adoption, CEO Joost Taverne told TechCrunch in February.

“We already work with several museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston,” said Taverne, a former congressman and diplomat who spent time in the US. audiobook of the diary of anne frank accessible for people with hearing loss. And now we have the solution for the workplace.”

Going to the B2B market is not an easy path, so it makes sense for Audus to focus on customers such as museums. They are often noisy, which can make audio guides difficult to hear. Using Knisper’s technology to make them more understandable brings benefits to the general public, not just those with hearing loss, which facilitates adoption.

Whispp

Whispp App Setup

Image Credits: Whispp

Fellow Dutch startup Whispp it also focuses on speech, but from a different angle. As TechCrunch reported from CES earlier this year, its technology is transforming whispered speech in a natural voice in real time.

Whispp’s primary target audience is “an underserved group of 300 million people worldwide with vocal impairments who have lost their voice but still have good articulation,” web page explains.

For example, people with voice disorders that leave them only able to whisper or use their esophageal voice. or who stutter, like CEO Joris Castermans. He knows very well how his speech is less affected when he whispers.

For those with impaired articulation due to ALS, MS, Parkinson’s, or strokes, solutions such as text-to-speech apps already exist — but these have drawbacks, such as high latency. For people who are still able to articulate, this may be too much of a compromise.

Thanks to audio-to-audio artificial intelligence, Whispp is able to provide them with a voice that can be produced in real time, is language agnostic and sounds real and natural. If users are able to provide a sample, it can even sound like their own voice.

Since there’s no text in the middle, Whispp is also more secure than alternatives, Castermans told TechCrunch. That could open up use cases for non-silent patients who need to have confidential conversations, he said.

How much non-voice-impaired people would be willing to pay for Whispp’s technology is unclear, but it also has several monetization avenues to explore with its core audience, such as the subscription it charges for its voice calling app.

Acapella

Image Credits: Acapela Group

Whispp highlights the need some have to store their voice for future use. Known as voice bankingthis process is what Acapela hopes to facilitate with one of its services launched last year.

Acapela Group, which was bought by Swedish accessibility technology company Tobii Dynavox for €9.8 million in 2022located in the text-to-speech space for several decadesbut only recently artificial intelligence has changed the picture for voice cloning.

The results are much better and the process is also faster. This will lower the bar for voice banking, and although not everyone will do it yet, there may be demand for people who know they are at risk of losing their voice after being diagnosed with certain conditions.

Acapela does not charge for the initial phase of the service, which consists of recording 50 proposals. Only when and if they need to install the voices on their devices do users need to purchase it, either directly through Acapela or through a third party (partner, reseller, national health insurance plan or other).

In addition to the new potential that AI unlocks, the above examples show some routes that startups are exploring to expand beyond a core target of users with disabilities.

Part of the thinking is that a larger addressable market can increase their future revenue and spread costs. But for their customers and partners, it’s also a way to stay loyal to definition of accessibility as “the quality of being accessible or usable by everyone, including people with disabilities.”

acapella group accessibility artificial deafness disability European inclusion intelligence Knisper Leveraging startups synthetic speech tech Visualfy Whispp
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleElon Musk embraces Tesla’s charging team after beating major automakers
Next Article US fines telcos $200 million for sharing customer location data without consent
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Why Hiring the Weird Works

27 March 2026

Silicon Valley’s two biggest dramas have crossed paths: LiteLLM and Delve

27 March 2026

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

27 March 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Why Hiring the Weird Works

27 March 2026

Sony and Honda abandon their joint EV project

27 March 2026

Now you can transfer your conversations and personal information from other chatbots directly to Gemini

27 March 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

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
Startups

Why Hiring the Weird Works

Silicon Valley’s two biggest dramas have crossed paths: LiteLLM and Delve

Conntour Raises $7M From General Catalyst, YC To Build AI Search Engine For Security Video Systems

© 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.