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

The deadline to submit applications for the Startup Battlefield 200 has been extended to June 8

Rivian is under investigation for rear suspension failures on R1 models

The groupthink explosion: what three top VCs really think about the AI ​​frenzy

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

    As the browser war heats up, here are the hottest alternatives to Chrome and Safari in 2026

    30 May 2026

    Coders refuse to work without artificial intelligence – and it could bite them

    30 May 2026

    This chip startup just raised $135 million on a bet that AI’s biggest bottleneck isn’t computation — it’s memory

    29 May 2026

    Glean’s top line tops $300M as AI budget cut becomes its main selling point

    29 May 2026

    How long is Anthropic’s lease with SpaceX? Opinions vary.

    28 May 2026
  • Apps

    YouTube adds new podcast features, including an AI recommendation tool and ‘Auto Speed’

    30 May 2026

    A sneak peek at the new Siri app reveals Apple’s plans to tackle ChatGPT and more

    29 May 2026

    Bluesky embraces long-form content to tackle X articles

    29 May 2026

    Sesame, the AI ​​chat startup from the founders of Oculus, is launching its iOS app

    28 May 2026

    Airbnb-backed WeRoad raises $58 million to bring its group travel platform to the US

    28 May 2026
  • Crypto

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close today

    27 May 2026

    5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

    25 May 2026

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026

    Coinbase to lay off 14% of staff as part of broader restructuring

    5 May 2026

    British cryptographer Adam Back denies NYT report that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto

    9 April 2026
  • Fintech

    Last 24 hours to save up to $410 on your Disrupt 2026 ticket

    29 May 2026

    2 days left: Lock in up to $410 in ticket savings for Disrupt 2026

    28 May 2026

    Robinhood now allows your AI agents to trade stocks

    28 May 2026

    Disrupt 2026 Early Bird ticket savings expire in 3 days

    27 May 2026

    Disrupt 2026 Early Bird ticket prices end May 29

    26 May 2026
  • Hardware

    This $300 Pizza Oven Can Easily Help Revive Your Summer Pizza Nights

    30 May 2026

    Kiwibit’s artificial intelligence bird feeder is my new backyard friend

    29 May 2026

    Vertu wants CEOs to run companies from a foldable AI starting at $6,880

    29 May 2026

    Oura unveils its Ring 5 with a thinner, lighter design starting at $399

    28 May 2026

    The Dreamie alarm clock made me stop using my phone in bed

    26 May 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    YouTube will automatically flag videos with artificial intelligence

    28 May 2026

    Meta launches Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp subscriptions, with more to follow, including AI plans

    27 May 2026

    Spotify now lets you view narrated magazine articles as well

    26 May 2026

    Spotify launches an audiobook creation tool powered by ElevenLabs

    22 May 2026

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani Takes To Twitch To Chat With New Yorkers

    21 May 2026
  • Security

    Iranian hackers blamed for breach of Los Angeles transit system that took weeks to recover

    30 May 2026

    Microsoft is under fire for threatening a security researcher with a criminal investigation

    29 May 2026

    A security flaw in prison payphone service Pay Tel exposed publicly the driver’s licenses of more than 300,000 callers

    29 May 2026

    Hackers are trying to steal Signal users’ backups in new wave of phishing attacks

    28 May 2026

    CrowdStrike and Google take down botnet used by hackers to target open source software developers

    28 May 2026
  • Startups

    The deadline to submit applications for the Startup Battlefield 200 has been extended to June 8

    30 May 2026

    H1 secures $40M from CVS, proving SaaS startups can still attract investment

    30 May 2026

    Cognition’s Scott Wu says AI coding agents shouldn’t replace humans

    29 May 2026

    How to apply to Startup Battlefield 2026, what you need before the June 8 deadline

    29 May 2026

    At Disrupt 2026: Databricks co-founder on what’s killing AI business deals

    28 May 2026
  • Transportation

    Rivian is under investigation for rear suspension failures on R1 models

    30 May 2026

    Waymo’s newest robotaxi is Chinese-made, built to make money, and is now accepting riders

    30 May 2026

    Slate Auto will announce pricing and take pre-orders for its EV on June 24

    29 May 2026

    Waymo dominates autonomous vehicle registrations as Tesla follows

    29 May 2026

    Slate Auto will begin taking orders for its affordable EV on June 24

    28 May 2026
  • Venture

    The groupthink explosion: what three top VCs really think about the AI ​​frenzy

    30 May 2026

    Corgi Announces $106M Raise at $2.6B Valuation — Double What It Was Worth 3 Weeks Ago

    30 May 2026

    In just 3 weeks, StrictlyVC is coming to Los Angeles

    29 May 2026

    Why Paris might be the most important AI city outside of Silicon Valley

    29 May 2026

    ClickHouse triples annual revenue to $250 million, charting a path to an IPO

    28 May 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»Big tech companies are plowing money into AI startups, which could help them avoid antitrust concerns
Startups

Big tech companies are plowing money into AI startups, which could help them avoid antitrust concerns

techtost.comBy techtost.com26 May 202404 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Big Tech Companies Are Plowing Money Into Ai Startups, Which
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Another week, and another round of crazy cash infusions and valuations has emerged from the AI ​​realm.

DeepLan artificial intelligence language translation startup, raised $300 million at a $2 billion valuation. AI scale, a data labeling platform for machine learning models, secured $1 billion as its valuation nearly doubled to $13.8 billion. and Ha fledgling French startup working on its own frontier models has raised an impressive $220 million round at an undisclosed valuation (though it certainly moves H comfortably into unicorn territory).

While all the usual institutional investors are present, such as Accel, Index and Y Combinator (YC), these investments really highlight the company’s climb to action while keeping regulators at arm’s length.

The quasi-merger

Take Scale AI, a company that had so far attracted purely institutional and angel investors from its founding in 2016 to its Series E round in 2021. Similar investors returned for Series F, but also in tow were Meta, Amazon, Nvidia and the VC Weapons of Intel, AMD, Cisco and ServiceNow.

On the same day that Scale AI announced its massive Series F investors, H showed its hand: Amazon had also bought, along with Samsung’s VC arm and UiPath, an automation software company valued at $10 billion today.

Corporate investment in AI startups has been a big story over the past couple of years, best exemplified by Microsoft’s close affinity with ChatGPT maker OpenAI. This deal has attracted scrutiny from antitrust regulators in the European Union and the UKdue to growing concerns that Big Tech is adopting a newquasi-mergerA tactic that seeks control and influence over nascent technologies without buying them outright — this can be through recruiting startup founding teams, for example, or through strategic investments.

Microsoft is said to own a 49% stake in OpenAI, meaning there could very well be an answer once European regulators complete their initial investigations — regardless of whether Microsoft has a vote on OpenAI or not.

Anthropic could find itself in a similar position. The three-year-old company has raised north of $7 billion from multiple investors, with the likes of Google, SAP and enterprise arms Salesforce and Zoom throwing cash into the pot. But Amazon, in particular, is responsible for more than half of Anthropic’s fundraising to date, completing a $4 billion investment in March. Although its investment did not give Amazon a majority stake (similar to Microsoft’s OpenAI), Britain’s antitrust regulator, the CMA, last month confirmed it was reviewing the deal to see if it could qualify for an investigation against monopolies.

At the same time, CMA also revealed that it was looking into Microsoft’s recent acquisition of Inflection AI (a year after Microsoft became Inflection’s biggest backer) which saw Microsoft scoop up its founders and key colleagues to run a new AI unit consumer, leaving a bare-bones Inflection AI focused on the business segment.

The CMA also confirmed it was investigating Microsoft’s recent $16 million investment in French artificial intelligence startup Mistral. But the regulator immediately concluded that the deal did not qualify for investigation because of its relative size.

“The CMA has considered the information submitted by Microsoft and Mistral AI, together with the comments received in response to its invitation to comment,” a CMA spokesperson said at the time. “Based on the evidence, the CMA does not believe that Microsoft has gained material influence over Mistral AI as a result of the collaboration and therefore does not qualify for an investigation.”

Although Nvidia has historically not been lumped into the same “Big Tech” category as these aforementioned companies, it has emerged as one of the major players in the artificial intelligence gold rush, and its influence cannot be overstated: the company was valued at a a paltry $770 billion this time last year, but that number has grown to more than $2.5 trillion in the intervening months. This places Nvidia as the third most valuable company globally, behind Microsoft ($3.17 trillion) and Apple ($2.87 trillion), but ahead of Meta ($1.18 trillion), Amazon ( $1.88 trillion) and Alphabet ($2.15 trillion).

Nvidia has invested in AI startup Hugging Face, along with Amazon, Google, Qualcomm, Intel and others. Elsewhere, Nvidia has bought stakes in Cohere, Perplexity AI, Inflection AI, CohesionMistral AI, Weka, Wayve and a host of other AI startups.

Big Tech shows no sign of relaxing its AI startup investment ethos, hoping that acquiring smaller stocks might just get them a regulatory pass. But that doesn’t mean the owners of Silicon Valley and Seattle won’t be able to exert some form of control over these companies — they are stakeholders, after all, and can influence startups in all kinds of subtle and not-so-subtle ways.

Antitrust avoid big Companies concerns Money plowing startups tech
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleHydrolix seeks to make log data storage faster and cheaper
Next Article Linktree has more than 50 million users, offers its social commerce program to more creators
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

The deadline to submit applications for the Startup Battlefield 200 has been extended to June 8

30 May 2026

H1 secures $40M from CVS, proving SaaS startups can still attract investment

30 May 2026

Waymo’s newest robotaxi is Chinese-made, built to make money, and is now accepting riders

30 May 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

The deadline to submit applications for the Startup Battlefield 200 has been extended to June 8

30 May 2026

Rivian is under investigation for rear suspension failures on R1 models

30 May 2026

The groupthink explosion: what three top VCs really think about the AI ​​frenzy

30 May 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Last 24 hours to save up to $410 on your Disrupt 2026 ticket

29 May 2026

2 days left: Lock in up to $410 in ticket savings for Disrupt 2026

28 May 2026

Robinhood now allows your AI agents to trade stocks

28 May 2026
Startups

The deadline to submit applications for the Startup Battlefield 200 has been extended to June 8

H1 secures $40M from CVS, proving SaaS startups can still attract investment

Cognition’s Scott Wu says AI coding agents shouldn’t replace humans

© 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.