The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Does Databricks' $10B Raise Point to an AI IPO Boom?
Episode Date: December 20, 2024Databricks raises a record-breaking $10 billion in its latest funding round, pushing its valuation to $62 billion. This round, the largest in venture history, highlights a potential AI IPO boom. Explo...re what this means for the AI market, competitors like OpenAI, and the broader tech industry. Brought to you by: Vanta - Simplify compliance - https://vanta.com/nlw The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614 Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/ Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown
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Today on the Daily Brief, an extended headlines edition led by Databricks non-IPO-IPO-IPO.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
To join the conversation, follow the Discord link in our show notes.
Hello, friends, quick note before I dive in.
When I started recording the headlines, as you'll hear, I wasn't sure that it was going to be a full extended edition,
but then 20 minutes later, it was clear that that made sense for this episode.
It's a little chaotic here as we try to close out the year.
I'm doing a bunch of pre-fills for the next couple of weeks, so you guys don't miss episodes.
but for today we are definitely going to do an extended headlines edition, and then I anticipate
Friday we will be back with a normal episode. Currently, the plan is for Monday to be the last normal
episode and then have pre-fills from there. We've got a ton of great countdown and end-of-year
reflection episode, so I'm very excited for those. But for now, let's catch up on the last
couple of days of headlines. Apologies for yesterday. As you can probably tell, I'm fighting
something off, and yesterday I was just completely knocked out. But we will catch up today, and we're
going to kick it off with Databricks $10 billion funding round valuing the company at $62 billion.
It's kind of an IPO even though it's not an IPO. So let's get into it.
This is officially the largest venture round in history. It's almost twice the size of OpenAI's
latest round in October. The series J round marks the company up by 30% from their last round,
which was raised in 2023. The 11-year-old startup will use the fund to provide liquidity to
employee shareholders, as well as to make acquisitions and expand overseas. In the same way that an
IPO allows early employees to get liquidity on their shares, that's what Databricks is in part
using this round for. Databricks for those of you who aren't familiar, provides data analytics and
AI solutions platforms to enterprise customers. It's an 11-year-old firm, and it is right at the top
of companies that are expected to IPO next year. In November, CEO Ali Goudsie said,
if we were going to go, the earliest would be, let's say, mid-next year or something like that.
He also noted that there aren't really many options for late-stage investors with large funds,
commenting, there's nowhere to put it really except maybe Databricks Striper, you know, maybe OpenAI.
The investor list for this round includes Thrive Capital, Andresen Horowitz, GIC, and iconic growth.
Still, Goetze says that this deal is a much better way to cash out his employees.
He said, the earliest theoretical possibility of an IPO would be next year, and then there's lockup
period, so it would just be too long of a period for employees to get liquidity.
Initially, Databricks was only looking for $3 to $4 billion from this round.
However, the insane demand made him rethink.
He said, I saw this Excel sheet where they keep a tally of all the people that want to invest.
It was 19 billion of interest, and I almost fell off the chair.
And we hadn't even talked to everybody.
I was like, oh my God, that's a huge amount of numbers.
And then we actually moved the price up.
Gozzi himself is on record suggesting that we are at a peak AI bubble.
He said, it doesn't take a genius to know that a company with five people which has no product,
no innovation, no IP, just recent grads, is not worth hundreds of millions, sometimes billions.
You get billion dollar valuations in these startups that have nothing.
That's a bubble.
Data Bricks, though, is in a good position.
It expects to generate positive free cash flow for the first time this quarter at $3 billion
in annualized revenue.
Their last financials published in October claimed 60% year-over-year revenue growth.
Most of the conversation on Twitter slash X is around how companies are continuing to not
want to wait into the IPO market.
Investor Matt Turk writes Series J is the new IPO.
Investor Tenae Jipora put some context around it, saying, to put the size of the round
into context, there have only been eight companies in U.S. history that raised more money
in their IPO round.
Gergerlio Ros explained why it might be better as an employee.
He said for reference, Uber raised around $8 billion during its IPO.
Employees had shares sold to cover for taxes but could not sell for another six months of lockup.
Next up, an update for Meta's Raybans.
Now, next week you're going to hear from me around what I thought were the top 15 AI products
of the year, and one of the things that I do not count among them is AI wearables.
And yet, very quietly, Meta's Raybans are an AI wearable that people really seem to love.
And with this new update, the product becomes much closer to an ever-present AI assistant.
The biggest new feature is called Live AI.
You can now talk to the glasses like you would any other voice-enabled assistant,
receiving voice responses from the AI.
The glasses also stream video as an input, meaning the assistant will be aware of the things you're looking at.
Meta sticking with the example of getting the AI to tell you which ingredients you should pick out at the grocery store,
a dagger to my not believing that that's actually a use-case heart,
but obviously the implications of the technology seem much bigger than pasta sauce.
Right now, the big catch is battery life.
The Rayban's only able to operate with full voice and video for half an hour.
And yet this update really does start to paint a picture of the future.
One of the other game-changing features is real-time translation.
The glasses can now translate between English and either Spanish, French, or Italian.
The translation can either be piped through the glasses embedded speakers or shown as transcripts on your phone.
And because Shazam is the app that just will not go away, which is great, I love them.
The glasses have also received a Shazam integration for identifying songs while out and about.
meta does warn that all of these features are still experimental, saying, as we test,
these AI features may not always get it right. We're continuing to learn what works best
in improving the experience for everyone. Still, this is a very cool slate of updates and is
increasingly pushing these from a device for enthusiasts to something that just everyone is going
to want. The update is now live, but only available to those in the early access program.
And if you're wondering how well the product is selling, Rayban is boasting that the
meta glasses are now their top selling product in 60% of stores across Europe, the Middle East.
and Africa. Staying in Meta Land for a minute, but going to a different direction,
Instagram head Adam Osseri has warned that AI content labeling may not be enough to ensure
AI safety. The topic of AI generated misinformation has evolved rapidly over the last year.
Heading into the election, it was presumed that influence campaigns would leverage
deepfakes in a hugely impactful way. One of the really interesting things about this election
cycle is that that just didn't happen. I had kind of wondered if that would be the case,
mostly on the basis of people having their guard up in a bigger way, but there also might have been
the capabilities issue. Image and video generation have rapidly improved over the past few months,
especially on the video side, making deepfakes a more credible concern than ever. So far,
AI safety around deepfakes is largely about two things. One, labs refusing prompts that could imply
nefarious use, or two, platforms supporting an AI labeling system in order to make sure that it's
clear what is AI and what isn't. Still, Mosseri warned that we may be thinking too simplistically
about AI safety and that the solution won't come from technology. He wrote,
generative AI is clearly producing content that is difficult to discern from recordings of reality and improving rapidly.
A friend, investor Sam Lesson, pushed me maybe 10 years ago on the idea that any claim should be assessed not just on its content,
but the credibility of the person or institution making that claim.
Maybe this happened years ago, but it feels like now is when we are collectively appreciating that it has become more important to consider
who is saying a thing than what they are saying when assessing a statement's validity.
Our role as internet platforms is to label content generated as AI as best we can, but some content will inevitably slip through
the cracks, and not all misrepresentations will be generated with AI. So we must also provide
context about who is sharing, so you can assess for yourself how much you want to trust their
content. It's going to be increasingly critical that the viewer or reader brings a discerning
mind when they consume content purporting to be an account or a recording of reality. My advice is to
always consider who it is that is speaking. And this is basically what I've thought for a while.
I think that the reason that I am somewhat less concerned around the deepfakes than many people are
is that I just think that humans are going to adapt incredibly quickly to a new set of norms.
In fact, I think that we're going to adapt so quickly that the real challenge will not be about
deepfakes tricking people, although there will be some amount of that, and I think it will break
along generational lines.
I think instead, it'll be dealing with the sociological implications of a world where no one trusts
anything.
We're already dealing with challenges in our political and social environment based on the
idea of fractured realities and different truths, and I do think that not trusting anything
that anyone says because of the concern of AI deepfakes could add a whole new dimension to that.
Still, it's interesting to see someone in such a key position discussing this topic.
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And now, back to the show.
Next up, let's catch up on OpenAI's 12 days of shipmiss.
Nothing huge but a bunch of fun and or small but meaningful updates.
One that's certainly more in the fun than meaningful category.
If you're looking for chatbot answers, you can now dial 1-800 chat GPT.
Yes, this is actually a thing.
OpenAI have hooked their voice-enabled LLM up to a phone line.
Users can call from the U.S. and message via WhatsApp,
globally. The phone integration uses OpenAI's real-time API, while the WhatsApp bot is powered by
GPT40 Mini. Calls are limited to 15 minutes per month, but available for free. OpenAI position this product
is purely about expanding their introductory range, stating that it offers a, quote, low-cost way to
try it out through familiar channels. They suggest the slim-down service probably doesn't bring
anything to the table for existing users. OpenAI chief product officer Kevin Wheel said,
this came out of a hack week project. The team built this just a few weeks ago and we loved it,
and they hustled really hard to ship it, and it's awesome to see it here.
We're just getting started making chat GPT more accessible to all of you.
And I think that's what is interesting about this.
It is not insane to me to think,
especially as we were just talking about generational divides,
that maybe some people might have their first experience
calling 1-800 chat GPT like it's the butterball hotline.
A slightly bigger update from earlier in the week,
although one that was very much drowned out by the announcement of VO2,
OpenAI have released their chat GPT search feature to all users.
Even free-tier users will now be able to access the AI enhanced search.
The rollout comes alongside a few major updates to the feature as well.
OpenAI has improved their citation engine featuring links to source material more prominently
and ahead of AI generated responses.
Presumably slash hopefully, citations are also more accurate, which has been a key gripe
of chat GPT search so far.
More impressive is the ability to use chat GPT search in combination with advanced voice
mode for paid tiers.
Users can now query the AI search engine using voice prompts and receive a verbal response
from OpenAI's voice assistant.
That also means that advanced voice mode now has access to up-to-date information from the web.
The search experience is now integrated into Google and Apple Maps, allowing for improved
location-based search as well.
Finally, users can now set ChatGPT search as their default search engine, making it accessible
from the address bar in the browser.
A couple reasons why this is maybe more significant than it seems.
The first is that it's very clear that Open AI is inching towards making advanced voice
mode a fully integrated U.X for most tasks.
I think that we are still barely scratching the surface on what advanced voice mode,
especially advanced voice mode with vision, really does for our interaction with AI.
you see a little bit of it with the new integration with the meta raybans,
but it really will be a very different world when the way that we interact with AI is talking to it,
and it has the visual context of everything we're experiencing around us,
versus having to type things in.
Maybe the bigger thing, though, is that it is so clear that the great battle right now
is for the default starting experience of the internet.
For 20 years, Google Search has been the way that people start their interactions with the web.
One could argue that the only challenge to that paradigm is social networks,
where when people aren't looking for things specifically, they browse and discover.
But when it comes to actually trying to get things done, Google Search has been king.
And even before ChatGBT, BT, it was clear that they were trying to compete for that same
slot, where you go to ChatGBTBT, BT before you go to Google to try to get answers to your
questions.
One little note from a business model perspective, the fact that they're rolling this out to free users
means a huge amount of casual users are going to try AI-assisted search for the first time,
and that probably implies that advertising-supported AI Search is going to be a big part of
the business model going forward.
The obvious comparison here is, of course, to perplexity.
Dettelist tweeted, in my opinion,
chat GPT's search won't be great until it's at least on par with perplexity.
Anything less from OpenAI, even if decent, just won't cut it, to be honest.
And interestingly, we got some news out of perplexity as well.
First, reports are that they have actually closed this latest funding round
at a $9 billion valuation.
According to Bloomberg, perplexity raised $500 million in a round that triples their valuation since June.
sources claim that the round was completed last month led by institutional venture partners.
What is more confirmed is that perplexity has acquired carbon, a small startup specializing
in connecting AI systems to external data. Perplexity CEO, Arvin Shrinivas wrote,
starting early next year, Perplexity will not just let you search over the web. It will connect
to Notion, Doc, Slack, and more. I'm excited about the carbon team joining us to work on this.
This is a massive area of enterprise competition. Think about a company that has 20,000, 30,000,
thousand employees, or even more. There is an incredible, incredible volume of data and information
that is generated. And the ability to search and access that information has been a perpetual
challenge. Now, there are a ton of people competing in this space. Glein, for example, has recently
broken out as one of the frontrunners, but Google and Open AI are also going to be in this game
to the extent that they're not already. But I think it's a really smart move for perplexity.
This is definitely the type of thing that will bring another look at the service from a lot of
enterprise users, and it makes this area of enterprise search a really interesting competition for the
year to come. Devianzsagerwal writes, Perplexity going all in on Enterprise Search with their acquisition of
carbon. This is going to be an interesting battle between perplexity and Glean and maybe Open AI.
Before their acquisition of carbon, I would have given the edge to glean, but now it will be a lot tighter.
Finally, today, a couple stories coming out of Nvidia. The first is that they've released an update
to their Jensen-Oren-Nana AI dev kit. The single board computer is similar to a Raspberry Pi
with a tensor cord GPU attached.
The new model is available at half the price, $249.
It has a 70% boost to neural processing
and a 50% increase in memory bandwidth.
Nvidia has aimed this device at hobbyists and makers
who need something small to power AI and robotics projects.
The device is also suitable for lightweight industrial automation
or other applications for small companies
that want on-premise AI compute.
Deep Utala, Nvidia's vice president of robotics and edge computing,
thinks this device will actually be a big unlock,
saying this is the time finally
when generative AI capability is
coming to the edge. Lastly, Nvidia has quietly grown a cloud business that could take on AWS.
Two years ago, the company began renting out servers filled with its AI chips directly to businesses.
Tucked away in the fine print in a recent investor disclosure, the company claimed the division
could generate $150 billion in revenue from software and cloud services. That would be more than
AWS generates annually at the moment, and in fact, more than Nvidia's entire revenue for 2024.
While it's a big claim, Nvidia is in the business of delivering incredible forecasts and then beating
them. More interesting is what this implies for the AI cloud industry as a whole. Invideo presumably
wouldn't be able to hit this target unless overall demand grows much, much larger. The other thing
interesting to me about this is just the question of what the future of Nvidia holds. This is a company
that is the dominant leader in its space right now that has inroads into so many other areas,
but also antitrust breathing down its neck. It is going to be fascinating to see what happens
as a new administration comes to bear. I think one thing that's for sure is that invidia in five years
is very unlikely to look exactly like InVidia of today.
For now, that is going to do it for our catch-up extended edition of the headlines.
Appreciate you listening, as always, and until next time, peace.
