Gulf News

World’s biggest AI start-up raises $1.2b in a few months

SenseTime specialise­s in systems that analyse faces and images on an enormous scale

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SenseTime Group Ltd has raised $620 million at a valuation of more than $4.5 billion just months after scoring a similar amount from investors led by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Singapore’s state investment firm.

Fidelity Internatio­nal and Silver Lake Partners were among the investors in the latest financing, bringing the total amount raised by the threeyear-old image recognitio­n start-up in the past six months to more than $1.2 billion and tripling its valuation in under a year. Tiger Capital, Qualcomm Ventures and Hopu Capital also participat­ed. The latest funding will go toward research and talent acquisitio­n, SenseTime said in a statement Thursday.

Investors are handing billions of dollars to Chinese artificial intelligen­ce start-ups, hoping to ride a wave of support from a government intent on becoming the world leader in the technology by 2030. But the growing hype is encouragin­g everything from video services to language schools to claim AI as integral to their business to win funding. Some investors warn the sector could experience a downturn towards the end of this year if those companies fail to deliver revenue growth.

SenseTime specialise­s in systems that analyse faces and images on an enormous scale and works with policing bodies across China. The start-up said it experience­d 400 per cent growth in each of the past three years as it encompasse­d more industries. Business contract revenue is up more than 10-fold so far this year, according to its statement.

The company’s a big contributo­r to the world’s biggest system of surveillan­ce: if you’ve ever been photograph­ed with a Chinese-made phone or walked the streets of a Chinese city, chances are your face has been digitally crunched by SenseTime software built into more than 100 million mobile devices. The country is ramping up spending on surveillan­ce as it cracks down hard on restive parts of the country, including Xinjiang.

A key focus for SenseTime is its internal talent developmen­t programme that seeks to cut its reliance on externally­trained AI developers as the industry hits a global crunch. It’s an effort that will become increasing­ly important as the US — currently the source of many of the world’s leading computer science graduates — drafts limitation­s on how long Chinese students can stay in the country.

Aside from Alibaba, it also counts Temasek Holdings Pte and retailer Suning.com Co. as investors.

It’s the largest, according to CB Insights, of a plethora of private AI outfits.

Fellow facial-recognitio­n start-up Megvii Inc raised $460 million last year, while smaller niche players from Yitu to Malong Technologi­es have also won funding. A key partner, Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology, is one of the world’s biggest suppliers of security cameras and developing its own competing AI technology.

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