Startups Weekly - When scaring us is great for business

TechCrunch Newsletter
TechCrunch logo
Startups Weekly logo

By Haje Jan Kamps

Friday, September 08, 2023

Welcome to Startups Weekly!

All right, all right, all right. Over the past few days, I’ve been listening to Matthew McConaughey’s memoir Greenlights, as read by the author. I honestly don’t know what compelled me to listen to it or how it ended up on my Audible app. I don’t even really like audio books. I knew the man had depth, but I swear I’m still reeling. Of course he has led a wild, crazy, outlaw life. Of course he has a bunch of great stories. But I’d never expect him to throw me for a considerable spin. It has little to do with startups and everything to do with finding yourself in the world — which means it has everything to do with startups. In any case: highly recommended.

It was, indirectly, the inspiration for my column this week, where I was reflecting on how app activation metrics are at odds with our mental health in many ways. That is particularly true for apps like Nextdoor, Citizen and the Ring doorbell app, which pipes fresh hot terror to your pocket 24/7. And, like the gullible, amygdala-powered animals we are, we respond. Maybe it’s time to opt out.

The TechCrunch team is getting pretty psyched about TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco in a couple of weeks. I’ll be onstage, among other things, interviewing Rajeev Rajan, the new(ish) CTO of Atlassian, and begrudgingly accepting sartorial advice from random strangers — that could be you!

On those cheerful notes . . . onward to what’s happening in startup land this week!

 image

Image Credits: Haje Kamps / MidJourney

The highest lows and the lowest highs

Ho’boy, startup life sure ain’t for the fainthearted, and there’s a lot of highs and lows happening all around us at the moment.

Medobed, an startup that promises medicine delivery in 10 minutes, was initially selected in Y Combinator’s S23 batch. The accelerator changed its tune, severing its ties with the Indian firm. A partner at the venture firm has also suggested to many prospective investors to not engage with the startup.

Apropos changing its mind — Chamet is a popular but controversial live video chat app. Google decided to yank the app from the Play Store. Big Goog didn’t give a specific reason but waved in the general direction of its “questionable user-generated content” policy.

Someone get a crash cart: Ingrid reported on Babylon Health succumbing to insolvency — after it was valued at almost $2 billion not that long ago. Today, it’s worth about $5,000 on paper. Yowzers.

Self-protesting protestors: People love a good scandal, and protestors rallied at Cruise HQ in San Francisco this week. But it appears that the particular incident they were protesting may have been overblown. It was alleged that an ambulance was blocked by a Cruise self-driving vehicle, but TechCrunch saw video footage of an incident where an ambulance was unimpeded in this case.

Sell, sell, sell: Benitago raised $380 million or so to buy up a bunch of e-commerce brands that do business on Amazon. This week, it filed for bankruptcy as the market contracted.

The highest lows and the lowest highs image

Image Credits: PM Images / Getty Images

GitLab announces the expansion of its startups program!

Sponsored by GitLab for Startups

GitLab's startups program supports qualifying startups with external funding. Eligible startups can access our full DevSecOps platform free for the first year, and continue to receive deep discounts in the second year.

Sign Up Now

Grab your pass to TC Disrupt 2023

Join 10,000 startup leaders in San Francisco at TechCrunch Disrupt on September 19–21. Last-minute passes are still available. Save 15% with code STARTUPS. Register now!

The ghost in the shell

The deal pace might be slowing a little (maybe?) but AI continues to be sizzling.

One interesting trend in the market is that we continue to see incumbents adding new features and functionality. A lot of our readers were curious about Kyle’s report that Zoom is rebranding and expanding its generative AI features, amid some privacy concerns along the way.

OpenAI wants its conversational AI agent ChatGPT everywhere, and that includes classrooms — despite the immense potential for misuse and confusion there. Taking the bull by the horns, the company has proposed a few ways for teachers to put the system to use. In addition to students rampantly cheating on their work with AI, that is.

Drop in, tune out, make shit up: My favorite AI piece this week came from Kyle. It’s well documented that AI models can “hallucinate” plausible-sounding information that’s extrapolated incorrectly from existing data. That may not be solvable with current-gen systems, but it may not be as bad as we think, he writes.

It knows if you’ve been tweeting, it knows when you’re asleep: Sarah reports that X’s privacy policy confirms it will use public data to train its AI models.

The lean startup gets faster, smarter, AI-ier: Last week, I spoke with the father of the lean startup, Steve Blank. He’s pretty psyched by AI and says it will revolutionize the “lean startup” movement, making startups leaner, meaner, and, well, AI-ier.

The ghost in the shell image

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

A healthy dose of startup news

As someone who is more than a little neuro-spicy myself, I’m pretty excited about Sam Altman backing Mentra, which aims to match neurodivergent jobseekers with ideal jobs. It’ll be interesting to see how that one shakes out (and whether the hirers are able to absorb hiring specifically for neurodivergent folks).

Bladder health isn’t the sexiest subject in the world, so it probably won’t surprise you there are so few startups focused on the area. Just one, in fact, according to its founder Peony Li — who’s just closed a $4.24 million seed round for her London-based bladder health startup set to expand into the U.S.

Fitter. Happier. More productive: Teale has secured a funding round of $11 million earlier this summer. The company provides a mental health platform for employees and helps HR managers when it comes to preventing burnout or quiet quitting.

A roof over your head: Hiring isn’t that similar to renting an apartment — or is it? Rent Butter believes that figuring out how risky a tenant is goes beyond your standard background check and credit score, and wants to help landlords rethink risk when it comes to screening tenants.

P-AI-n killers: The opioid epidemic has had a whack-a-mole kind of complexity, stumping researchers for the better part of two decades. Assistant professor at UC Berkeley School of Public Health Jerel Ezell argues that AI might be the spark that ends the opioid epidemic.

A healthy dose of startup news image

Image Credits: ThitareeSarmkasat / Getty Images

Top reads on TechCrunch this week

As ever, a slew of our most-read stories are already included above, but here are a few of the shining beacons on the hill (or, at least, those that climbed the rankings in our analytics tool) over the past week:

Pause for laws: Free Fire, by Garena, was banned in India over national security concerns. Now Free Fire is relaunching a year after it was banned.

Paws for faux pas: Oh dear, bargain supermarket chain Lidl got itself into a lidl bit of trouble after its aimed-at-kids Paw Patrol snacks listed a website on the packaging that showed adult content.

Pause just because: Texas passed a law that requires those who want to enjoy some internet smut have to go through an ID check. It turns out that’s hard to do, and the state cannot yet enforce ID checks on porn sites.

Pause for applause: Anker introduces some clever new travel chargers that make it easier to take your gadgets on the road. Just in time for Disrupt, too!

Read more stories on TechCrunch.com

Newest Jobs from Crunchboard

See more jobs on CrunchBoard

Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $200 per month.

Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Flipboard

View this email online in your browser

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Unsubscribe

© 2023 Yahoo. All rights reserved. 110 5th St, San Francisco, CA 94103

Older messages

Our favorite startups from YC’s Summer 2023 Demo Days

Friday, September 8, 2023

TechCrunch+ Newsletter TechCrunch+ logo TechCrunch+ Roundup logo By Walter Thompson Friday, September 08, 2023 Welcome to TechCrunch+ Friday Image Credits: Refat Mamutov/500px / Getty Images Most

Greycroft, NEA, Accel & more to judge Startup Battlefield at Disrupt

Friday, September 8, 2023

September 19-21 | San Francisco Meet The Startup Battlefield Judges Meet The Startup Battlefield Judges What makes investors schedule that first pivotal meeting or followup on that cold email?

IBM says its new Granite series LLM was trained on 'curated, enterprise-quality data'

Thursday, September 7, 2023

TechCrunch Newsletter TechCrunch logo The Daily Crunch logo By Christine Hall Thursday, September 07, 2023 In today's top story, AI continues to be at the forefront of new products and services.

Under new rules, EU says 6 US tech 'gatekeepers' fall under Digital Markets Act

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

TechCrunch Newsletter TechCrunch logo The Daily Crunch logo By Christine Hall Wednesday, September 06, 2023 Today's top story has the European Union naming names — is it safe to call them “The Big

Indian government issues warning after advanced malware campaign targets Android users

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

TechCrunch Newsletter TechCrunch logo The Daily Crunch logo By Christine Hall Tuesday, September 05, 2023 In today's top story, India warned its citizens of some advanced malware targeting Android

You Might Also Like

💻 Installing Linux on an Old Laptop Instead of a Raspberry Pi — Flagship Phones Need More Storage

Monday, November 18, 2024

Also: I Built the Perfect Programming Platform In Less Than 10 Minutes, and More! How-To Geek Logo November 18, 2024 Did You Know The Sixth Sense was the highest-grossing horror film of all time in

Daily Coding Problem: Problem #1612 [Hard]

Monday, November 18, 2024

Daily Coding Problem Good morning! Here's your coding interview problem for today. This problem was asked by Etsy. Given a sorted array, convert it into a height-balanced binary search tree.

10,000 ways to fail & The European Search Perspective

Monday, November 18, 2024

Reflecting on over five years of Creativerly, Signal introduces Call Links, the science of mental models, and a lot more in this week's issue of Creativerly. Creativerly 10000 ways to fail &

Charted | Global GHG Emissions, by Sector 🌎

Monday, November 18, 2024

In this graphic, we show greenhouse gas emissions by sector in 2023. View Online | Subscribe | Download Our App Presented by: New 3-Part Series: Bitcoin Demystified >> Learn more about one of the

Spyglass Dispatch: Samsung/Google Smart Glasses • Star Wars Mess • Netflix Knocked Out • Conan's Oscars • MicroStrategy's Comeback • Vision Pro In Focus • Saving 'Inside the NBA' • Apple Television Lives!

Monday, November 18, 2024

Samsung/Google Smart Glasses • Star Wars Mess • Netflix Knocked Out • Conan's Oscars • MicroStrategy's Comeback • Vision Pro In Focus • Saving 'Inside the NBA' • Apple Television Lives!

GCP Newsletter #424

Monday, November 18, 2024

Welcome to issue #425 November 18th, 2024 News Google Kubernetes Engine Official Blog 65000 nodes and counting: Google Kubernetes Engine is ready for trillion-parameter AI models - Google Kubernetes

Design and code beautiful products. Together.

Monday, November 18, 2024

Pablo Ruiz-Múzquiz and the team at ​Penpot​ have recently announced a new plugin feature that allows users to build new tools and functionalities on the platform. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏

Can Bitcoin Put an End to Forever War?

Monday, November 18, 2024

Top Tech Content sent at Noon! How the world collects web data Read this email in your browser How are you, @newsletterest1? 🪐 What's happening in tech today, November 18, 2024? The HackerNoon

25 tips for programming with AI

Monday, November 18, 2024

Meta Quest dominates Steam VR; Stop squirting hot glue into devices -- ZDNET ZDNET Tech Today - US November 18, 2024 digitalspeed-gettyimages-1322205545 25 AI tips to boost your programming

Ordering, Grouping and Consistency in Messaging systems

Monday, November 18, 2024

We went quite far from our Queue Broker series in recent editions, but today, we're back to it! By powers combined, I joined our Queue Broker implementation to solve the generic idempotency check