Tech Brew Ride Home - Anthropic Makes Its Move
Episode Date: February 13, 2026Anthropic raises the second largest financing round of all time. Other AI players are beginning to show hockey stick revenue growth. Meta wants to add facial recognition to its glasses. Ring pulls bac...k from some recognition partnerships for its camera. And, of course, your Weekend Longreads Suggestions. Anthropic closes $30 billion funding round as cash keeps flowing into top AI startups (CNBC) Enterprise AI startup Cohere tops revenue target as momentum builds to IPO: Investor memo (CNBC) Meta Plans to Add Facial Recognition Technology to Its Smart Glasses (NYTimes) Ring cancels its partnership with Flock Safety after surveillance backlash (The Verge) Weekend Longreads Suggestions: The AI Gold Rush Is Breaking a Silicon Valley Taboo: Cashing Out Before the IPO (WSJ) The New Fabio Is Claude (NYTimes) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the TechBrew Right Home for Friday the 13th of February.
2026, I'm Brian McCullough today.
Anthropic raises the second largest financing round of all time.
Other AI players are beginning to show hockey stick revenue growth.
Meta wants to add facial recognition to its glasses.
Ring pulls back from some recognition partnerships for its cameras.
And of course, your weekend long read suggestions.
Here's what you missed today in the world of tech.
Anthropic has raised a $30 billion series G round,
led by GIC and Co2 and co-led by D.E. Shaw, Dragonnear, Founders Fund, Iconic, and MGX at a $380 billion
post-money valuation. Quoting CNBC, opening eye has the largest private tech fundraising round
on record. Rival Anthropic now has the second largest. Anthropic announced on Thursday the
close of a $30 billion funding round at a $380 billion post-money valuation, more than double what
the artificial intelligence company was worth in September when it last raised money.
Anthropics said the round includes a portion of the previously announced investments from Microsoft and
Nvidia, which said in November that they planned to commit up to $5 and $10 billion, respectively.
Anthropics annualized revenue has climbed to $14 billion, the company said after revenue last year reached roughly $10 billion.
Whether it is entrepreneurs, startups, or the world's largest enterprises, the message from our customers is the same.
Claude is increasingly becoming more critical to how businesses work.
Anthropic CFO Krishna Rao said in a statement,
This fundraising reflects the incredible demand we are seeing from these customers.
The company said the fresh capital will support Anthropics infrastructure expansion, research,
and its continued investment in enterprise-grade products.
Open AI is also engaged in fundraising talks with investors for a round that could close at around
$100 billion, as CNBC previously reported.
The company has to pad its cash position after inking $1.4 trillion worth of infrastructure
deals last year.
Anthropic gets about 80% of its business from enterprises.
CEO Dario Amadai told CNBC last month. That's partly thanks to the company's viral AI coding tool,
Claude Code, which can automate parts of the software development process.
Claudecodes annualized revenue has increased to $2.5 billion and business subscriptions
have quadrupled since the start of the year, Anthropics said Thursday. Enterprise users
represent more than half of Claude's revenue, end quote.
Just to underline that a bit, Anthropic says its run rate revenue has hit $14,000.
billion growing over 10x annually in each of the past three years. And Claude Codes run rate,
revenue has grown to more than $2.5 billion. We are, folks, seeing revenue in some of these
places, go hockey stick. Here's another data point to that end, also from CNBC. Cohere hit
roughly $240 million in annual recurring revenue last year, surpassing its $200 million target,
according to a February investor memo viewed by CNBC. It saw,
quarter over quarter growth of more than 50% throughout 2025, the memo said.
Our thesis is clearly resonating in the market, the company wrote.
Our sales pipeline continues to grow as global organizations across regulated sectors
choose Cohere as their trusted partner for secure AI adoption at scale.
Founded in Toronto in 2019, Cohere develops models and builds software tools for businesses.
The company is backed by investors, including Nvidia and Salesforce ventures,
and its valuation has swelled to roughly $7 billion.
Cohere's investor memo comes after CEO Aidan Gomez said in October that the startup hopes to make its public market debut, quote, soon.
He told Bloomberg that he thinks investors would welcome a, quote, pure play AI investment opportunity.
Cohere told investors that its capital-efficient model sets it apart from its rivals in the industry.
The company primarily generates revenue from software, and it said it can avoid hefty infrastructure costs because customers can run its models through their managed cloud services or on their own hardware directly.
This approach allows Cohere to invest more aggressively in customer acquisition and research and development, according to its investor memo.
Cohere's gross margins averaged around 70% in 2025, expanding by 25 basis points year over year, the memo said.
By scaling compute resources proportionally to customer demand, we remain insulated from the speculative excesses surrounding the broader AI market positioning Cohere for more sustainable growth.
Cohere wrote, end quote.
The New York Times has seen a memo suggesting.
that meta plans to add facial recognition to its smart glasses later this year, saying the political
tumult in the U.S. could distract critics from the feature's release. Quote, five years ago,
Facebook shut down the facial recognition system for tagging people and photos on its social network,
saying it wanted to find the right balance for a technology that raises privacy and legal concerns.
Now it wants to bring facial recognition back. Meta, Facebook's parent company plans to add the feature
to its smart glasses, which it makes with the owner of Rayban and Oakley, as soon as this year,
according to four people involved with the plans who were not authorized to speak publicly
about confidential discussions. The feature, internally called name tag, would let wearers
of smart glasses identify people and get information about them via Meta's artificial intelligence
assistant. Meta's plans could change. The Silicon Valley company has been conferring since early
last year about how to release a feature that carries, quote, safety and privacy risks,
according to an internal document viewed by the New York Times.
The document from May described plans to first release name tag to attendees of a conference for the blind,
which the company did not do last year before making it available to the general public.
Meta's internal memo said the political tumult in the United States was good timing for the features release.
We will launch during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us
would have their resources focused on other concerns, according to the document from Meta
as reality labs, which works on hardware including smart glasses.
Facial recognition technology has long raised civil liberty and privacy concerns for its
potential use by governments to monitor citizens and suppress dissent by corporations to track
unwitting customers or by creeps at bars. Some cities and states have restricted or banned
use of the technology by the police over concerns about its accuracy. Meta is exploring
who should be recognizable through the technology, two of the people said. Possible options include
recognizing people a user knows because they are connected on a meta platform and identifying people
whom the user may not know, but who have a public account on a meta site like Instagram.
The feature would not give people the ability to look up anyone they encountered as a universal
facial recognition tool to people familiar with the plan said.
Meta smart glasses require a wearer to activate them to ask the AI assistant a question or to take
a photo or video.
The company is also working on glasses internally called a super sensing that would continue
run cameras and sensors to keep a record of someone's day, similar to how AI note takers
summarize video call meetings, three people involved with the plans said.
Facial recognition would be a key feature for super-sensing glasses so they could, for example,
remind wearers of tasks when they saw a colleague. Mr. Zuckerberg has questioned if the glasses
should keep their LED light on to show people they are using the super-sensing feature,
or if they should use another signal, one person involved in the plan said. As part of an FTC settlement,
Meta in the past has agreed to review every new or modified product for potential risks to the privacy of the company's users.
In January 2025, Meta relaxed that process for reviewing privacy risks, according to an internal post-viewed by the times.
The company's privacy teams have less influence over product releases, and there are new limits on how long the risk review process takes.
Around that time, employees who worked on risk review questioned whether Meta would still be in compliance with its FTC settlement under the changes.
Andy Millen, a director of risk review in reality labs, told them that she believed the changes could, quote, push the bounds of Meadows agreement with the FTC, according to a recording of an internal meaning obtained by the times.
Mark wants to push on it a little bit, Ms. Millen said, referring to Mr. Zuckerberg, end quote.
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Amazon's ring.
has cancelled its partnership with flock safety, which would have let law enforcement agencies request
footage from Ring doorbell users after a backlash, quoting the Verge. Following intense backlash
to its partnership with flock safety, a surveillance technology company that works with law
enforcement agencies, Ring has announced it is canceling the integration. In a statement
published on Ring's blog and provided to the Verge ahead of publication, the company said,
quote, following a comprehensive review, we determined the planned flock safety integration would
require significantly more time and resources than anticipated. We therefore made the joint decision
to cancel the integration and continue with our current partners. The integration never launched,
so no ring customer videos were ever sent to flock safety, end quote. The statement goes on to say
that Ring's mission to make neighborhoods safer, quote, comes with significant responsibility
to our customers, to the communities we serve, and to the trust you place in our products and features.
Trust is the big one there. Over the last few weeks, the company has faced significant public
anger over its connection to flock, with ring users being encouraged to smash their cameras and
some announcing on social media that they are throwing away their ring devices. The flock partnership
was announced last October, but following recent unrest across the country related to ice
activities, public pressure against the Amazon-owned Ring's involvement with the company
started to mount. Flock has reportedly allowed ICE and other federal agencies to access its network
of surveillance cameras and influencers across social media have been claiming that Ring is providing
a direct link to ICE.
While that claim probably isn't accurate as the flock integration has never gone live,
Ring has a history of partnering with police, and the new partnership quickly came under intense
criticism. Adding fuel to the fire, this weekend, Ring aired a Super Bowl ad for its new AI-powered
search party feature. While the company says the feature is designed to find lost dogs and
maintains it is not capable of finding people, the ad raised fears that ring cameras were
being used for mass surveillance. The ad shows dozens of ring cameras in a neighborhood
scanning the streets. On top of this,
the company recently launched a new facial recognition feature called Familiar Faces.
Combined with Search Party, the technological leap to using neighborhood cameras to search for people
through a mass surveillance network suddenly seems very small.
Flock was the second partner ring announced for community requests, the first being
AXON, a law enforcement technology company known for making tasers.
With the new service, only law enforcement agencies that use the company's software can submit
requests.
But the end result is the same.
Law enforcement gets video from users if they choose.
to share it. Ring spokesperson Yassi Yager says the axon partnership is unaffected by the end of the
flock integration. Additionally, she says no other integrations are currently being explored, end quote.
Time for the weekend long read suggestions. First up from The Journal, the AI race has broken
a longstanding Silicon Valley no-no. Quote, Notion is among a host of startups and tech
companies including Stripe, OpenAI, Anthropic, Databricks, and SpaceX that are giving employees
eager to access wealth tied up in private shares a way to cash out some of it. It marks a shift
in Silicon Valley culture as companies stay private longer. Selling startup shares early was long viewed
as a taboo and a sign of lacking long-term commitment. Companies have been able to successfully remove
the stigma of doing secondary offers for employees, said Charlie Franklin, Chief Executive of Kampa,
which tracks compensation data. The dam is broken. The number of tender offers completed on
Carter, which offers financial services to startups climb 60% in 2025 from the prior year.
Even young startups are pursuing tender offers as demand surges for private artificial intelligence
stocks, and founders recognize that such deals are crucial to retaining talent.
If on paper you're worth $10 million, you're going to want liquidity for that because
you're living in a studio apartment in San Francisco when you could instead go and buy
a 6,000 square foot house in Atherton, an exclusive suburb, said Noel Mold Vai,
co-founder and chief executive of private stock marketplace augment.
Stripe founded in 2010 is in the early stages of a tender offer that will value the payments
company at over $140 billion up from $91.5 billion a year earlier, according to people
familiar with the matter. Anthropic has also allowed employees to sell shares in the past
and is planning another tender offer at a $350 billion valuation according to people familiar with
the matter, end quote. And from the New York Times, a look at how AI is disrupting the romance
novel industry. Quote, Ms. Rompote began writing romance novels with the help of artificial intelligence in
2024 using the program pseudorite. As a plus-sized woman, Ms. Rompodi wanted to see heavier-set
heroines she could relate to in romance fiction. AI supercharged her writing process, enabling her to produce
10 novels in a little over a year, including the billionaire's curvy match and curves to own,
pregnant by the billionaire. But while the program made writing faster and easier, it was terrible
at describing a plus-sized heroin, perhaps because there are so few in mainstream fiction, which many
AI programs were trained on. Whenever Ms. Rompote's curvy protagonist, an event planner named
Sienna was in a scene, the AI constantly referenced her weight, for example, noting that a chair
groaned when she sat down. When you make a point that someone is plus-sized, it will exaggerate.
Somebody is suddenly humongous, she said. It's impossible to get it.
how many romance novels are produced with artificial intelligence, many authors don't reveal they
use chatbots for fear of alienating readers. A survey of more than 1,200 authors across genres
showed that about a third were using generative AI for plotting, outlining, or writing,
and the majority said they did not disclose their AI use to readers, according to Book Bub,
a book discovery site that released the poll last May. Some authors who publicly oppose
the technology are secretly signing up for Ms. Hart's classes, she said.
rapid incursion of AI-generated stories is rattling some in the romance business. Publishers and
authors worry that books by real authors are getting lost in a sea of digital slop as AI-enabled
novels flood the market, end quote. But here's my bigger question, the question I've asked
before, when Sam Altman turns on the ability to have ChatchipT spin up your romance story for
you on demand, exactly how you want, do you need to turn to someone else to
write the story you want to read right now. That's basically the question for all of art,
full stop, right? And again, I think this is coming sooner than everybody thinks.
If I get time to edit it tonight or tomorrow, you will have a bonus episode this weekend
wherein our good friend Chris Mims of the Wall Street Journal and I talk in a pretty
philosophical way about using AI in our daily lives, an interesting conversation given the
headlines from this week. Like I said, I hope to get that to you tomorrow. We shall see.
Talk to you on Monday.
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