VC Vinod Khosla dice que el gobierno de EE. UU. podría obtener una billete del 10% en todas las empresas públicas para suavizar el topetazo de AGI – ButterWord

Khosla Ventures founder, Vinod Khosla, shares his ideas about sharing the abundance of AI.

ButterWord

Discover top venture capital firms like a16z, Accel, Khosla Ventures, and Bessemer. Evaluate unique strengths for your startup's success.

#success #Bessemer #Khosla #Accel #venturecapital #startups #a16z #earlystage

https://masonq.com/2025/07/20/vc-this-week-%f0%9f%8e%8a-comprehensive-analysis-for-entrepreneurs/

Top VC Firms for Entrepreneurs: A Guide for 2025

Discover top venture capital firms like a16z, Accel, Khosla Ventures, and Bessemer. Evaluate unique strengths for your startup's success.

masonQ
Khosla Ventures entre VC que experimentan con roll-ups de empresas maduras con IA. – ButterWord

VC firms are pioneering a new investment strategy: acquiring established businesses and optimizing them with AI to boost efficiency and customer reach.

ButterWord
Fastino entrena modelos de IA en GPU de juegos baratos y recaudó $ 17.5 millones dirigidos por Khosla – ButterWord

Tech giants like to boast about trillion-parameter AI models that require massive and expensive GPU clusters. But Fastino is taking a different approach.

ButterWord

#Ramp, a little-known firm with investors linked to #PeterThiel, #JDVance, #ElonMusk and #DonaldTrump could get a piece of the federal expense card system — and its hundreds of millions in fees. “This goes against all the normal contracting safeguards,” one expert said.

#Trump #Musk #Vance #Thiel #Kushner #Khosla

https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-peter-thiel-ramp-gsa-smartpay-expense-payment-system

Trump Team Eyes Politically Connected Startup to Overhaul $700 Billion Government Payments Program

A little-known firm with investors linked to JD Vance, Elon Musk and Trump could get a piece of the federal expense card system — and its hundreds of millions in fees. “This goes against all the normal contracting safeguards,” one expert said.

ProPublica
Atomicwork innoveren met ai: nieuwe investeringen en uitbreidingsplannen

Atomicwork, een veelbelovende SaaS-startup uit India, heeft onlangs $25 miljoen opgehaald in een nieuwe investeringsronde onder leiding van Khosla Ventures. He

Tech Nieuws
De kracht van kunstmatige intelligentie in de moderne klantenservice

In een recente financieringsronde, geleid door Khosla Ventures, heeft het door AI aangedreven startupbedrijf DevRev maar liefst $100 miljoen opgehaald, wat de

Het laatste, trending tech nieuws

Tech executives and investors said they were invigorated by Harris

“It’s democracy time, people,” Roy #Bahat, an investor at Bloomberg Beta, posted on LinkedIn.
Aaron #Levie, the chief executive of Box, a cloud storage company, wrote on X that Mr. Biden had shown “amazing leadership,” adding, “Now let’s go!”

The energy was a far cry from the dismay felt in tech circles recently as some of the industry’s most influential voices declared they were for Mr. Trump.
The rejuvenation could blunt the momentum of pro-Trump conservatives in Silicon Valley and entice more wealthy tech executives to throw their support — and money — behind the Democratic ticket.

Just last week, the political winds in Silicon Valley appeared to be blowing to the right.
On Tuesday, Mr. #Andreessen 😨and Mr. #Horowitz😨, founders of the influential investment firm Andreessen Horowitz, argued in a 90-minute podcast that Mr. Trump was the best candidate for start-ups, with plans to donate millions to his campaign. Days earlier, Mr. #Musk 😨had also endorsed Mr. Trump.
They had been preceded by David #Sacks 😨and Chamath #Palihapitiya, 😨two tech investors who had hosteda $12 million fund-raiser for Mr. Trump in June. Doug #Leone 😨and Shaun #Maguire 😨of Sequoia Capital, a top investment firm, had also said that they would vote for Mr. Trump.

Yet despite the growing sense of a MAGA takeover, not everyone in tech moved toward Mr. Trump.
“You have people with the loudest voices claiming to speak for the broader community, and the views don’t match,” said Katie Jacobs #Stanton, founder of Moxxie Ventures, a venture capital firm.
“By no means do they line up with the thousands of founders and employees and investors who live and work in Silicon Valley.”
John #Coogan, a start-up founder, wrote in a blog post in June that media coverage of Silicon Valley’s support for Mr. Trump was “at odds with reality.”
Top venture capitalists had given four times more money to Democrats than Republicans in the first part of the year, he argued.

“Trump is very unpopular in Silicon Valley in general,” Mr. #Khosla said, adding that those who were pro-Trump were “only a small constituency.”
Now liberals in tech are rejuvenated.
Mr. #Mehta said that some of his WhatsApp chats, particularly those that included Indian people in tech, exploded with excitement for Kamala Harris, whose mother is from India.
To show support for the vice president, some implored people to make small donations, while others discussed potential fund-raisers, he said.
Mr. #Hoffman, a founder of LinkedIn and a prominent Democratic donor, emphasized in essays, videos and social media posts that Mr. Trump was a danger to the rule of law and democracy.
“You can’t use business justification as your cloak, as your rationalization, for being supportive of Trump,” he said.

Mr. #Levie of Box said he had spoken to a dozen other tech and business people on Sunday who were now optimistic about the election in November.
He said he was hopeful that Democrats could deliver a positive message on issues that the tech industry cared about, including A.I., entrepreneurship and immigration reform for high-skilled workers.
“We have a chance to get excited and rally around someone,” he said.

On Sunday, Mr. #Hoffman endorsed Ms. Harris, while Mr. #Khosla called for an open process at the Democratic convention.
Mr. #Suster said his phone blew up with a collective message of “thank god.”
He estimated that three-quarters of the people he interacted with in tech were happy about Mr. Biden’s withdrawal and would not support Mr. Trump.

It’s Silicon Valley vs. Silicon Valley as Political Fights Escalate

Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman and other tech billionaires,
-- many of whom are part of the “PayPal Mafia,”
-- are openly brawling with one another over politics as tensions rise.

Less than an hour after a gunman in Butler, Pa., tried to assassinate Donald Trump this month,
David #Sacks, a venture capitalist based in San Francisco,
directed his anger about the incident toward a former colleague.

“The Left normalized this,” Mr. Sacks wrote on X, linking to a post about Reid #Hoffman, a technology investor and major Democratic donor.

Mr. Sacks implied that Mr. Hoffman, a critic of Mr. Trump who had funded a lawsuit accusing the former president of rape and defamation, had helped cause the shooting.

Elon #Musk, who leads SpaceX and Tesla and previously worked with Mr. Sacks and Mr. Hoffman,
then weighed in on X, name-checking Mr. Hoffman and saying people like him “got their dearest wish.”

In Silicon Valley, the spectacle of tech billionaire attacking tech billionaire has suddenly exploded,
as pro-Trump executives and their Democratic counterparts have openly turned on each other.

The brawling has spilled into public view online, at conferences and on podcasts,
as debates about the country’s future have turned into personal broadsides.

The animus has pit those who once worked side by side and attended each other’s weddings against one another,
fraying friendships and alliances that could shift Silicon Valley’s power centers.

The fighting has been particularly acute among the 🔸“PayPal Mafia,” 🔸
a wealthy group of tech executives
— including Mr. Hoffman, Mr. Musk, Mr. Sacks and the investor Peter #Thiel
— who worked together at the online payments company in the 1990s
and later founded their own companies or turned into high-profile investors.

Other tech leaders have also been pulled into the political spats, including Vinod #Khosla, a prominent investor, and Marc #Andreessen and Ben #Horowitz of the Silicon Valley venture firm Andreessen Horowitz.

Their unabashed vitriol is stark.

While tech leaders often criticize one another in private,
they rarely do so publicly for fear of upsetting a potential deal partner or future job prospect.

“Until a year or two ago, there was something like an #omertà in Silicon Valley,” said Roger McNamee,
a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, using a word popularized by the Italian mafia for a code of silence.

“People had fights all the time and leaders would disagree, but you wouldn’t disagree in public.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/29/technology/silicon-valley-politics-elon-musk-reid-hoffman.html?unlocked_article_code=1.-00.mbMn.lcxJeRZWmP_6&smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman and Other Tech Billionaires Brawl Over Politics

Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman and other tech billionaires, many of whom are part of the “PayPal Mafia,” are openly brawling with one another over politics as tensions rise.

The New York Times
TIL: Nick Thorburn wrote the theme for #Serial. Siddhartha Khosla wrote the theme for #OnlyMurdersInTheBuilding. When #Khosla was on #SongExploder, he never mentioned the SERIAL theme. When OMITB premiered, Nick Thorburn complained on Social Media, but no one ever wrote about it. They are practically the same song. What’s up with that?