Connect with us

Business

Why IVP’s Somesh Dash believes that Silicon Valley can look beyond AGI for spirituality

Published

on



Venture capitalists erected their industry on the altar of profits, with perhaps a dash of rationalism. There is an element of faith needed to power their belief that taking flyers on early-stage companies can lead to billions—the Silicon Valley version of prosperity gospel. Still, it would be hard to argue that venture capital is a religious practice. 

That seems to be changing. The tech industry is engaged in its own personal grail quest—the hunt for AGI, or artificial general intelligence—as engineers and investors become increasingly convinced they can mold their own version of God out of code. And amid the fervor, Peter Thiel is hosting a series of lectures in San Francisco on the Antichrist. The first was this week. 

But does all tech-based spirituality need to be built around LLMs? I caught up with Somesh Dash, a general partner at the venture firm IVP, who has taken a different approach. Dash grew up Hindu, which he says he still practices in a more cultural sense, arguing for the need for community and service. 

As he points out, the recent trend of technology has been the opposite. Rather than fostering connections between people, tech is increasingly focused on building machines that will interact with—and train—other machines. This seems to present a crossroads moment for humanity. It would be easy for us to retreat from each other, though Dash is optimistic that the rise of AI will showcase an important human strength that chatbots lack (or at least can only emulate): empathy. “That, I think, will persist and will never be fully replicated in any form of a machine or AI system,” he tells me. 

If that seems too New Age-y to be practical, Dash points to his own experience to illustrate how he infused his investing approach with the ethos. After backing social platforms like Snap and Discord, he witnessed first-hand how initially innocuous forms of communication snowballed into something much more malicious, such as the white supremacist rallies in Charlottesville. 

“What I was most excited by was this idea of collaboration, community, and fun,” Dash says, “But what I think I and everybody else was a bit naive to was how much of it, in the name of free speech, could be utilized without safeguards, to actually harm kids and lead to lots of problems.” Now, when Dash makes consumer investments, he makes sure there are trust and safety teams “deeply embedded in the psyche” of the companies.  

More broadly, Dash argues that backing for-profit companies can still be an engine for societal change, such as his investment in the health tech company Abridge, which frees up doctors’ time by eliminating menial tasks. “By having the greatest impact, you’ll have likely a big financial return,” he says. 

Of course, that’s not a new argument in Silicon Valley. It wasn’t too long ago that social media platforms like Facebook were touting their mission-driven approach to fostering community and change, with monster profits as a nice added bonus. It’s easy for companies to abandon any commitment to social good when the bottom line is at stake—just look at OpenAI’s push to change its nonprofit status. 

But Dash still believes that more investors can infuse their strategy with empathy, which seems more fulfilling than funding their own personal AGI deities. “People are looking for meaning and leadership,” he tells me. “Every company I view, and every founder, has a responsibility, in my mind, to do things in a way that is safe and responsible.”

Leo Schwartz
X:
@leomschwartz
Email: leo.schwartz@fortune.com

Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here.

Joey Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter. Subscribe here.

VENTURE DEALS

Ollin Biosciences, an Austin, Texas-based biopharmaceutical company developing therapeutics for vision-threatening diseases, raised $100 million in funding. ARCH Venture Partners, Mubadala Capital, and Monograph Capital led the round.

Omnea, a London, U.K.-based procurement intake and orchestration platform, raised $50 million in Series B funding. Insight Partners and Khosla Ventures led the round and were joined by Accel, Point Nine, First Round Capital, and Prosus.

Genomines, a Paris, France-based plant-based metal farming company, raised $45 million in Series A funding. Engine Ventures and Forbion BioEconomy led the round and were joined by DeepTech & Climate Fonds, Wind, Lowercarbon Capital, Entrepreneurs First, and others.

Macroscope, a San Francisco-based product development tracking platform, raised $30 million in Series A funding. Lightspeed led the round and was joined by Adverb, Thrive Capital, and Google Ventures.

RegScale, a McLean, Va.-based governance, risk, and compliance platform, raised $30 million in Series B funding. Washington Harbour Partners led the round and was joined by M12, Hitachi Ventures, and others.

Markup AI, a New York City-based developer of software designed to ensure that AI content meets brand and compliance standards, raised $27.5 million in Series A funding. Genui Partners and EMH Partners led the round and were joined by Capital Factory and others.

Turnout, a San Diego, Calif.-based platform designed to help users access government and financial benefits, raised $21 million in seed funding. Shine Capital and LGVP led the round and were joined by Swish Ventures, Jaz Capital Partners, Zeev Ventures, HoneyStone, and others.

Birches Health, a New York City-based provider of gambling addiction treatment, raised $20 million in Series A and seed funding. AlleyCorp led the Series A round and General Catalyst led the seed round.

Atomionics, a Singapore-based developer of quantum gravimetry sensors for mineral discovery, raised $12.7 million in pre-Series A funding. Paspalis led the round and was joined by BHP Ventures, In-Q-Tel, Wavemaker, and others.

Conduct, a London, U.K.-based developer of agentic AI technology designed to modernize IT systems, raised $12 million in seed funding. Creandum led the round and was joined by Lucid Capital, Booom, and angel investors.

Ray Security, a Tel Aviv, Israel-based data security platform, raised $11 million in seed funding. Venture Guides and Ibex Investors led the round 

Rec, a San Francisco-based operating system for community recreation departments, raised $11 million in Series A funding. Crosslink Capital led the round and was joined by others.

GridStrong, a New York City-based electric grid compliance and operations platform, raised $10 million in seed funding. Congruent Ventures led the round and was joined by Energize Capital and others.

Icarus, a New York City-based company developing robots designed for labor in space, raised $6.1 million in seed funding. Soma Capital and Xtal led the round and were joined by Nebular and Massive Tech Ventures.

CreatorDB, a Taipei City, Taiwan-based influencer marketing company, raised $4.7 million in Series A funding. Acorn Pacific Ventures led the round and was joined by Pegatron, Meimaii Technology, and others.

Terra Oleo, a Singapore-based developer of sustainable oils and fats, raised $3.1 million in funding from ADB Ventures, The Radical Fund, Elev8.vc, Better Bite Ventures, and others.

Ethosphere, a Seattle, Wash.-based developer of voice AI for retailers, raised $2.5 million in pre-seed funding. Point 72 Ventures led the round and was joined by A12 Incubator, Carya Ventures, Pack VC, and others.

Buscaro, a Karachi, Pakistan-based company that connects companies and schools with commuting buses, raised $2 million in seed funding. Daman Investments led the round and was joined by Cartography Capital, Epic Angels, Wahed Ventures, and others.

PRIVATE EQUITY

Rithm Capital agreed to acquire Paramount Group, a New York City-based real estate investment trust, for approximately $1.6 billion in total considerations. 

Counsel Press, backed by Align Capital Partners, acquired Firefly Legal, a Mokena, Ill.-based provider of service of process, skip tracing, court e-filing, and litigation services. Financial terms were not disclosed.

DigiCert, backed by Clearlake Capital Group, Crosspoint Capital Partners, and TA Associates, acquired Valimail, a Boulder, Colo.-based email authentication platform. Financial terms were not disclosed. 

Redslim, a portfolio company of Astorg, acquired CatMan Solution, a Copenhagen, Denmark-based retailer data harmonization and visualization company. Financial terms were not disclosed. 

Sheridan Capital Partners acquired a majority stake in National Care Systems, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based billing and payroll platform for nursing and assisted living facilities. Financial terms were not disclosed. 

TEAM Technologies, a portfolio company of Arlington Capital Partners, acquired TAG3 Engineering, a Sunrise, Fla.-based developer of interventional medical devices. Financial terms were not disclosed.

EXITS

Keensight Capital agreed to acquire a majority stake in Isto Biologics, a Hopkinton, Mass.-based orthobiologic company, from Thompson Street Capital Partners. Financial terms were not disclosed.

PEOPLE

Dawn Capital, a London, U.K.-based venture capital firm, promoted Shamillah Bankiya to partner.



Source link

Continue Reading

Business

Google researchers figure how to get AI agents to work better

Published

on



Welcome to Eye on AI. In this edition…President Trump takes aim at state AI regulations with a new executive order…OpenAI unveils a new image generator to catch up with Google’s Nano Banana….Google DeepMind trains a more capable agent for virtual worlds…and an AI safety report card doesn’t provide much reassurance.

Hello. 2025 was supposed to be the year of AI agents. But as the year draws to a close, it is clear such prognostications from tech vendors were overly optimistic. Yes, some companies have started to use AI agents. But most are not yet doing so, especially not in company-wide deployments.

A McKinsey “State of AI” survey from last month found that a majority of businesses had yet to begin using AI agents, while 40% said they were experimenting. Less than a quarter said they had deployed AI agents at scale in at least one use case; and when the consulting firm asked people about whether they were using AI in specific functions, such as marketing and sales or human resources, the results were even worse. No more than 10% of survey respondents said they had AI agents “fully scaled” or were “in the process of scaling” in any of these areas. The one function with the most usage of scaled agents was IT (where agents are often used to automatically resolve service tickets or install software for employees), and even here only 2% reported having agents “fully scaled,” with an additional 8% saying they were “scaling.”

A big part of the problem is that designing workflows for AI agents that will enable them to produce reliable results turns out to be difficult. Even the most capable of today’s AI models sit on a strange boundary—capable of doing certain tasks in a workflow as well as humans, but unable to do others. Complex tasks that involve gathering data from multiple sources and using software tools over many steps represent a particular challenge. The longer the workflow, the more risk that an error in one of the early steps in a process will compound, resulting in a failed outcome. Plus, the most capable AI models can be expensive to use at scale, especially if the workflow involves the agent having to do a lot of planning and reasoning.

Many firms have sought to solve these problems by designing “multi-agent workflows,” where different agents are spun up, with each assigned just one discrete step in the workflow, including sometimes using one agent to check the work of another agent. This can improve performance, but it too can wind up being expensive—sometimes too expensive to make the workflow worth automating.

Are two AI agents always better than one?

Now a team at Google has conducted research that aims to give businesses a good rubric for deciding when it is better to use a single agent, as opposed to building a multi-agent workflow, and what type of multi-agent workflows might be best for a particular task.

The researchers conducted 180 controlled experiments using AI models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. It tried them against four different agentic AI benchmarks that covered a diverse set of goals: retrieving information from multiple websites; planning in a Minecraft game environment; planning and tool use to accomplish common business tasks such as answering emails, scheduling meetings, and using project management software; and a finance agent benchmark. That finance test requires agents to retrieve information from SEC filings and perform basic analytics, such as comparing actual results to management’s forecasts from the prior quarter, figuring out how revenue derived from a specific product segment has changed over time, or figuring out how much cash a company might have free for M&A activity.

In the past year, the conventional wisdom has been that multi-agent workflows produce more reliable results. (I’ve previously written about this view, which has been backed up by the experience of some companies, such as Prosus, here in Eye on AI.) But the Google researchers found instead that whether the conventional wisdom held was highly contingent on exactly what the task was.

Single agents do better at sequential steps, worse at parallel ones

If the task was sequential, which was the case for many of the Minecraft benchmark tasks, then it turned out that so long as a single AI agent could perform the task accurately at least 45% of the time (which is a pretty low bar, in my opinion), then it was better to deploy just one agent. Using multiple agents, in any configuration, reduced overall performance by huge amounts, ranging between 39% and 70%. The reason, according to the researchers, is that if a company had a limited token budget for completing the entire task, then the demands of multiple agents trying to figure out how to use different tools would quickly overwhelm the budget.

But if a task involved steps that could be performed in parallel, as was true for many of the financial analysis tasks, then multi-agent systems conveyed big advantages. What’s more, the researchers found that exactly how the agents are configured to work with one another makes a big difference, too. For the financial-analysis tasks, a centralized multi-agent syste—where a single coordinator agent directs and oversees the activity of multiple sub-agents and all communication flows to and from the coordinator—produced the best result. This system performed 80% better than a single agent. Meanwhile, an independent multi-agent system, in which there is no coordinator and each agent is simply assigned a narrow role that they complete in parallel, was only 57% better than a single agent.

Research like this should help companies figure out the best ways to configure AI agents and enable the technology to finally begin to deliver on last year’s promises. For those selling AI agent technology, late is better than never. For the people working in the businesses using AI agents, we’ll have to see what impact these agents have on the labor market. That’s a story we’ll be watching closely as we head into 2026.

With that, here’s more AI news.

Jeremy Kahn
jeremy.kahn@fortune.com
@jeremyakahn

FORTUNE ON AI

A grassroots NIMBY revolt is turning voters in Republican strongholds against the AI data-center boom —by Eva Roytburg

Accenture exec gets real on transformation: ‘The data and AI strategy is not a separate strategy, it is the business strategy’ —by Nick Lichtenberg

AWS CEO says replacing young employees with AI is ‘one of the dumbest ideas’—and bad for business: ‘At some point the whole thing explodes on itself’ —by Sasha Rogelberg

What happens to old AI chips? They’re still put to good use and don’t depreciate that fast, analyst says —by Jason Ma

AI IN THE NEWS

President Trump signs executive order to stop state-level AI regulation. President Trump signed an executive order giving the U.S. Attorney General broad power to challenge and potentially overturn state laws that regulate artificial intelligence, arguing they hinder U.S. “global AI dominance.” The order also allows federal agencies to withhold funding from states that keep such laws. Trump said he wanted to replace what he called a confusing patchwork of state rules with a single federal framework—but the order did not contain any new federal requirements for those building AI models. Tech companies welcomed the move, but the executive order drew bipartisan criticism and is expected to face legal challenges from states and consumer groups who argue that only Congress can pre-empt state laws. Read more here from the New York Times.

Oracle stock hammered on reports of data center delays, huge lease obligations. Oracle denied a Bloomberg report that it had delayed completion of data centers being built for OpenAI, saying all projects remain on track to meet contractual commitments despite labor and materials shortages. The report rattled investors already worried about Oracle’s debt-heavy push into AI infrastructure under its $300 billion OpenAI deal, and investors pummeled Oracle’s stock price. You can read more on Oracle’s denial from Reuters here. Oracle was also shaken by reports that it has $248 billion in rental payments for data centers that will commence between now and 2028. That was covered by Bloomberg here.

OpenAI launches new image generation model. The company debuted a new image generation AI model that it says offers more fine-grained editing control and generates images four times faster than its previous image creators. The move is being widely viewed as an effort by OpenAI to show that it has not lost ground to competitors, in particular Google, whose Nano Banana Pro image generation model has been the talk of the internet since it launched in late November. You can read more from Fortune’s Sharon Goldman here.

OpenAI hires Shopify executive in push to make ChatGPT an ‘operating system’ The AI company hired Glen Coates, who had been head of “core product” at Shopify, to be its new head of app platform, working under ChatGPT product head Nick Turley. “We’re going to find out what happens if you architect an OS ground-up with a genius at its core that use its apps just like you can,” Coates wrote in a LinkedIn post announcing the move.

EYE ON AI RESEARCH

A Google DeepMind agent that can make complex plans in a virtual world. The AI lab debuted an updated version of its SIMA agent, called SIMA 2, that can navigate complex, 3D digital worlds, including those from different video games. Unlike earlier systems that only followed simple commands, SIMA 2 can understand broader goals, hold short conversations, and figure out multi-step plans on its own. In tests, it performed far better than its predecessor and came close to human players on many tasks, even in games it had never seen before. Notably, SIMA 2 can also teach itself new skills by setting its own challenges and learning from trial and error. The paper shows progress towards AI that can act, adapt, and learn in environments rather than just analyze text or images. The approach, which is based on reinforcement learning—a technique where an agent learns by trial and error to accomplish a goal—should help power more capable virtual assistants and, eventually, real-world robots. You can read the paper here.

AI CALENDAR

Jan. 6: Fortune Brainstorm Tech CES Dinner. Apply to attend here.

Jan. 19-23: World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland.

Feb. 10-11: AI Action Summit, New Delhi, India.

BRAIN FOOD

Is it safe? A few weeks ago, the Future of Life Institute (FLI) released its latest AI Safety Index, a report that grades leading AI labs on how they are doing on a range of safety criteria. A clear gap has emerged between three of the leading AI labs and pretty much everyone else. OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic all received grades in the “C” range. Anthropic and OpenAI both scored a C+, with Anthropic narrowly beating OpenAI on its total safety score. Google DeepMind’s solid C was an improvement from the C- it scored when FLI last graded the field on their safety efforts back in July. But the rest of the pack is doing a pretty poor job. X.ai and Meta and DeepSeek all received Ds, while Alibaba, which makes the popular open source AI model Qwen, got a D-. (DeepSeek’s grade was actually a step up from the F it received in the summer.)

Despite this somewhat dismal picture, FLI CEO Max Tegmark—ever an optimist—told me he actually sees some good news in the results. Not only did all the labs pull up their raw scores by at least some degree, more AI companies agreed to submit data to FLI in order to be graded. Tegmark sees this as evidence that the AI Safety Index is starting to have its intended effect of creating “a race to the top” on AI safety. But Tegmark also allows that all three of the top-marked AI labs saw their scores for “current harms” from AI—such as the negative impacts their models can have on mental health—slip since they were assessed in the summer. And when it comes to potential “existential risks” to humanity, none of the labs gets a grade above D. Somehow that doesn’t cheer me.

FORTUNE AIQ: THE YEAR IN AI—AND WHAT’S AHEAD

Businesses took big steps forward on the AI journey in 2025, from hiring Chief AI Officers to experimenting with AI agents. The lessons learned—both good and bad–combined with the technology’s latest innovations will make 2026 another decisive year. Explore all of Fortune AIQ, and read the latest playbook below: 

The 3 trends that dominated companies’ AI rollouts in 2025.

2025 was the year of agentic AI. How did we do?

AI coding tools exploded in 2025. The first security exploits show what could go wrong.

The big AI New Year’s resolution for businesses in 2026: ROI.

Businesses face a confusing patchwork of AI policy and rules. Is clarity on the horizon?



Source link

Continue Reading

Business

Lidl launches holiday meal deal for less than $4 per person

Published

on



Lidl US is offering its first-ever holiday meal deal that serves 12 people for less than $4 per person. The shopping list includes a ham portion priced at $0.77 per pound, 12 ounces of hawaiian rolls at $1.79, and 7.25 ounces of mac and cheese for $0.56, as well as many other food items like sweet potatoes and ingredients to make a pumpkin pie. The deal runs through Dec. 24, according to the company’s press release

In total, the meal costs $42.66 and feeds 12 people. To qualify for the holiday meal at less than $4 per person, customers must be myLidl members. Other items not part of the holiday meal deal are offered at a discount, including a slightly pricier line featuring premium ham and an assortment of desserts.

“Lidl US is dedicated to making high-quality food accessible to everyone, especially during this time of year,” Lidl US CEO Joel Rampoldt said.

Holiday deals coming at the right time for consumers

The discount deal comes as American shoppers pull back on gift spending for the holidays and voters sour on grocery prices.

In November, President Donald Trump announced he was scrapping tariffs on beef, coffee, and other commodities as Democrats and Republicans alike decried a growing affordability crisis.

Despite inflation slowing since its pandemic spike, food price growth ticked up to 3.1% in September—the latest government data available—slightly outpacing headline inflation at 3% and well above the Fed’s target rate of 2%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Still, the economy remains afloat, in large part due to a K-shaped economy, in which wealthier Americans who own financial and property assets have enjoyed the period of elevated inflation, while Americans with less financial means have been struck by sticker shock and rising energy prices. This has led to a downward trend in economic activity from low-income earners and an upward trend in assets owned by the wealthy, creating a “K” shape. 

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, estimated in September the top 10% of earners account for about 49.2% of all U.S. consumer spending—heights that haven’t been reached in data back since 1989. The top 20% accounted for more than 60% of total spending this year.

When announcing another 25 basis points cut last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell was uneasy about the state of the K-shaped economy.

“As to how sustainable it is, I don’t know,” Powell said.



Source link

Continue Reading

Business

Ford CEO Jim Farley said Trump would halve the EV market by ending subsidies. Now he’s writing down $19.5 billion amid a ‘customer-driven’ shift

Published

on



Several months ago, Ford CEO Jim Farley said ending the nearly two-decade-long EV tax credit would halve America’s electric vehicle market. Now, his company is facing its own reality check.

Ford said this week it would cease production for the original electric F-150 Lightning, which was once touted as a breakthrough for the industry, and shift some of its existing workforce to producing a hybrid version of the pickup with a gas-powered generator called an EREV‚ or an extended range electric vehicle. The automaker said it would be taking a $19.5 billion charge in 2026 as a result of this “customer-driven shift.” 

With that in mind, it’s worth reviewing what Farley said at the Ford Pro Accelerate summit in Detroit in September. EVs will remain a “vibrant industry” going forward, he said, but also “smaller, way smaller than we thought.” The end of the $7,500 consumer incentive would be a game-changer, Farley added, before predicting that EV sales in the U.S. could plummet from to 5% from a previous 10%-12%.

Speaking to CNBC on Monday about Ford’s electric pivot, Farley claimed the EV market had, in fact, already shrunk to around 5% of the U.S. vehicle market. The automaker’s EV lineup was simply out of sync with consumer demand, he said.

“More importantly, the very high end EVs, the 50, 60, 70, $80,000 vehicles, they just weren’t selling,” Farley told CNBC.

Farley had established Ford’s Model E division in 2022 to innovate on electric vehicles and operate as a startup within the more-than-100-year-old automaker. At the same time, Farley told CNBC that he knew when he established Model E, it would be “brutal business-wise.” That may have been an understatement. In under three years, the Model E division has lost $13 billion, more than double Ford’s net income for 2024

As part of its pivot, Farley said the company is listening to consumers.

“We’re following customers to where the market is, not where people thought it was going to be, but to where it is today,” he said. 

This means prioritizing hybrid and semi-gas-powered EREVs over pure-play EVs. These categories are what customers are still interested in, Farley said. 

To be sure, the company says its Model E division will still be profitable, but in 2029, three years after the 2026 date it had previously targeted. By 2030, the company is also predicting that hybrids, semi-gas-powered EREVs, and pure-play EVs will make up half of Ford’s global sales, a stark increase from about 17% now. And most of that, Farley told CNBC, will be “hybrid and EREV.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © Miami Select.