The Sunday Guardian

Tech giants aggressive­ly buying AI startups

- SAN FRANCISCO REUTERS.

A total of 34 artificial intelligen­ce startups were acquired in the first quarter of this year, more than twice the amount of activity in the year-ago quarter, according to the research firm CB Insights. Tech giants seeking to reinforce their leads in artificial intelligen­ce or make up for lost ground have been the most aggressive buyers. Alphabet Inc’s Google has acquired 11 AI startups since 2012, the most of any firm, followed by Apple Inc , Facebook Inc and Intel Corp, respective­ly, according to CB Insights. The companies declined to comment on their acquisitio­n strategies. A spokesman for Apple did confirm the company’s recent purchase of Lattice Data, a startup that specialize­s in working with unstructur­ed data. The first quarter also saw one of the largest deals to date as Ford Motor Co (F.N) invested $ 1 billion in Argo AI, founded by former executives on self- driving teams at Google and Uber Technologi­es Inc. Startups are looking to go deep on applicatio­ns of artificial intelligen­ce to specific fields, such as health and retail, industry observers say, rather than compete directly with establishe­d companies. “What you will see is very big players will build platform services, and startup communitie­s will migrate more to applied intelligen­t apps,” said Matt McIlwain, managing director of Madrona Venture Group. Healthcare startup Forward, for example, is using artificial intelligen­ce to crunch data that can inform doctors’ recommenda­tions. Tech giants have been locked in a bidding war for academics specializi­ng in artificial intelligen­ce. Startups rarely have the capital to compete, but a company with a specialize­d mission can win over recruits, said Vic Gundotra, chief executive of AliveCor, which makes an AI-driven portable heart monitor.

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