Top News
Federal auto-safety regulators have opened a special crash investigation into a fatal Tesla Model 3 wreck near Houston after a driver allegedly using an automated driver-assistance system crashed into a home and killed a woman inside. The Wall Street Journal has more here. [Tesla is pushing back on the Tesla autopilot narrative. TechCrunch has more here.]
President Trump signed two executive orders aimed at accelerating U.S. quantum-computing development, including a 2028 target for a quantum computer powerful enough to conduct scientific research, while also moving up the government’s deadline for quantum-resistant security systems to 2031. The Wall Street Journal has more here.
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Ethan Thornton Is Trying to Do Everything All at Once

Image Credits: TechCrunch / StrictlyVC
By Connie Loizos
Ethan Thornton dropped out of MIT at 19 to build weapons. The first one, a hydrogen-powered system he prototyped with parts from Home Depot and Amazon, didn’t work out — “hydrogen was just a bad bet in general,” he told me this past week at TechCrunch’s StrictlyVC event in Los Angeles. Three years later, his company, Mach Industries, is running six weapons programs and earlier this month closed a $300 million Series C round at a $1.8 billion valuation. The startup has now raised roughly $485 million altogether.
Thornton grew up in Boerne, Texas, a town with roughly 25,000 residents, in a family with deep military ties. Around 2017 or 2018 — when he was still in his early teens — he started becoming, by his own account, “really, really concerned” about the rise of China and what he saw as an impending great-power conflict. That concern eventually sharpened into a conviction that unmanned systems were about to redefine warfare, and that the U.S. was moving too slowly to meet the moment.
What that looks like in practice, midway through 2026, is those six simultaneous weapons programs and a company that has a lot to prove instead of focusing on one thing, getting that right, and then expanding. Thornton is aware that Mach’s diffuse focus creates some lingering questions for outsiders. “It’s very hard,” he volunteered Thursday night. But he doesn’t think defense rewards the kind of single-minded focus that rocket launch, say, demands. “It is a chess game you’re playing with an adversary,” he said, “with hundreds of different products that need to be shipped if we want security.” Pick just one, he suggested, and you’ve already lost the game.
These aren’t simple products. Mach is working on a vertical-takeoff strike aircraft, a long-range anti-ship missile, two stratospheric systems, a cheap surface-to-air interceptor built to kill drones, and — announced earlier this week — a 40-foot, roughly 4,000-pound Navy logistics-and-strike aircraft that takes off near-vertically and flies over a thousand miles with a thousand-pound payload.
That last one is a real jump for a company whose biggest aircraft to date has been about 13 feet long. And none of the six is in full-rate production yet. Thornton says Mach has won around 13 government contracts, most sitting in the middle stage of defense procurement — past initial design, into testing on a government range, but short of the rate-manufacturing tier that fewer than 10 programs industrywide have ever reached.
Massive Fundings
A24, the 14-year-old New York indie film studio behind Everything Everywhere All At Once and Backrooms, received a $75 million investment from Google DeepMind as part of a partnership to develop AI tools for filmmaking. TechCrunch has more here.
AppsFlyer, a 15-year-old San Francisco company that provides marketing analytics software for tracking which digital ads drive app downloads and purchases, secured a $1+ billion Series E round at a $2.7 billion post-money valuation, according to Axios. Investors reportedly include Moloco, Google, Meta, and Unity. The company has raised a total of $1.3 billion. Crunchbase News has more here.
Bionyra Pharma, a one-year-old Paris startup that develops monoclonal and bispecific antibodies targeting immune pathways to treat inflammatory diseases such as atopic dermatitis and inflammatory bowel disease, raised a $165 million Series A round co-led by Jeito Capital and Sofinnova Partners, with Arkin Bio, Sanofi Ventures, Sixty Degree Capital, Vives Partners, and Apollo Health Ventures also participating. More here.
Castelion, a three-year-old startup based in Torrance, CA, that makes hypersonic missiles, is reportedly in the market to raise a round at a $12+ billion valuation. The Information has more here.
CRED, an eight-year-old Indian startup that provides credit-card payments, rewards, lending, insurance, and wealth products, secured a $900 million Meta-led financing through a mix of primary and secondary share purchases at a $4.5 billion post-money valuation. Founder Kunal Shah will step down as CEO to lead WhatsApp, with Miten Sampat taking over as interim CEO. TechCrunch has more here.
Fomo, a one-year-old New York startup that provides a mobile app for retail users to trade cryptocurrencies and manage digital asset portfolios, raised a $75 million Series B round at a $550 million valuation. The deal was led by Index Ventures, with Union Square Ventures as well as previous investor Benchmark also investing. The company has raised a total of approximately $94 million. The Block has more here.
Groq, a decade-old company based in San Jose, CA, that provides cloud infrastructure for running AI inference, raised a $650 million round co-led by Disruptive and Infinitum at an undisclosed valuation. The company was last valued at $6.9 billion and has recently pivoted toward its neocloud business after Nvidia licensed its language processing technology and hired away several senior leaders. TechCrunch has more here.
Nearfield Instruments, a 10-year-old Rotterdam company that makes chip inspection equipment that helps semiconductor manufacturers measure tiny 3D structures on wafers, find defects during production, and improve yields for advanced AI chips, raised a $380 million Series D round at a $1.6 billion post-money valuation. The deal was led by Fidelity, with Temasek, Walden Catalyst Ventures, Innovation Industries, M&G, Invest-NL, QIA, TNO Ventures, and ING also engaging. SiliconANGLE has more here.
Nura Bio, an eight-year-old startup based in South San Francisco, CA, that is developing neuroprotective small-molecule drugs for neurological diseases, including SARM1 inhibitors being tested in ALS patients, raised a $73.8 million Series B round led by The Column Group and including Euclidean Capital, Samsara BioCapital, and Sanofi Ventures. The Pharma Letter has more here.
Upscale AI, a one-year-old startup based in Santa Clara, CA, that builds networking infrastructure that connects accelerators, memory, and storage across large AI clusters to reduce latency and improve hardware utilization for cloud providers, raised a $190 million Series A round at a $2 billion post-money valuation. The deal was led by Premji Invest, with Nvidia, Salesforce Ventures, Seligman Ventures, and Temasek as well as previous investors Maverick Silicon, Mayfield, Prosperity7 Ventures, StepStone Group, and Tiger Global also piling on. The company has raised a total of $500 million. More here.
Big-But-Not-Crazy-Big Fundings
American Perpetuals Exchange, a recently founded New York startup that plans to operate a regulated U.S. exchange for perpetual futures, raised a $30 million round. Lux Capital was the deal lead at a $300 million valuation, according to Fortune. The Block has more here.
Cuprum Metals, a three-year-old startup based in Boulder City, NV, that is developing water-based chemical leaching processes to recover copper from sulfide and oxide ores and mine tailings for mining operations, raised a $19.4 million Series A round led by Lundin Family Office, with Woodline Partners and BHP Ventures also taking part. Pulse 2.0 has more here.
Isometric, a four-year-old London startup that verifies carbon removal and other industrial certifications by using AI to check sensor data, satellite images, supply-chain records, and lab results, reducing review times from months to hours, raised a $40 million Series A round. AVP was the deal lead, with John Doerr and Walter Kortschak as well as previous investors Plural and Lowercarbon Capital also stepping up. Tech Funding News has more here.
Prosper AI, a three-year-old New York startup that deploys voice-based AI agents to handle patient scheduling, insurance verification, billing, and intake workflows for healthcare providers and health systems, raised a $30 million Series A round led by Andreessen Horowitz, with Base10 as well as previous investors Emergence Capital, Y Combinator, and Company Ventures also stepping up. MobiHealthNews has more here.
Superlight, a 10-year-old UK company that develops purpose-built electric trucks for middle-mile logistics operators to transport goods between distribution centers more efficiently and at lower operating cost, raised a $21 million Series A round co-led by Engine Ventures and 2150. The company has raised a total of $33 million. More here.
Smaller Fundings
Channel Robotics, a three-year-old startup based in Del Mar, CA, that is building a handheld robotic system that adds dexterity to flexible endoscopes, enabling physicians to perform advanced minimally invasive procedures without large robotic systems, raised a $2.5 million "seed+" round led by True Ventures. The company has raised a total of $4.6 million. Pulse 2.0 has more here.
Devplan, a one-year-old Seattle startup that connects GitHub, Jira, Slack, and coding tools to track product and engineering work, answer status queries, generate updates, and flag project risks, raised a $2.5 million seed round led by A12 Incubator, with Acequia Capital, Mighty Capital, Grand Ventures, and eLab Ventures also contributing. GeekWire has more here.
June Health, a two-year-old Toronto startup that aims to provide employer-sponsored women’s healthcare navigation and care coordination, raised a $1.7 million pre-seed round. Investors included Securian Canada and AgeTech Capital. Pulse 2.0 has more here.
Kinomatic, a five-year-old startup based in Arroyo Grande, CA, that provides orthopedic surgeons with patient-specific surgical planning, implant selection, and recovery management for knee and hip replacements using 3D modeling, simulation, and patient data, raised a $4 million seed round led by Waterline Ventures. More here.
Orthogonal, a one-year-old San Francisco startup that enables AI agents to discover services, route transactions across blockchains, and execute machine-to-machine payments through on-chain settlement infrastructure, raised a $4.3 million seed round led by Pantera Capital, with Y Combinator, Pioneer Fund, Decasonic, Blast, Outbound, and Surreal also digging in. More here.
Ralo, a one-year-old New York startup that automates mortgage rate comparison, preapproval, and loan processing by aggregating lender price sheets and guiding borrowers through closing via AI loan officers, raised a $2.9 million seed round. Investors included Y Combinator, Manresa Ventures, and Pack Ventures. Housing Wire has more here.
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New Funds
Seedcamp, the 19-year-old London seed firm that was an early backer of Revolut, Wise, UiPath, Synthesia, and Fluidstack, raised $320 million across a $220 million first-check fund and a $100 million Select fund to back portfolio companies through Series B and beyond. TechCrunch has more here.
Going Public
Bending Spoons, a 13-year-old Milan software company that acquires and revamps digital businesses, is preparing to file for a U.S. IPO that could reportedly raise up to $1.62 billion and value the owner of Vimeo, WeTransfer, AOL, and Eventbrite at as much as [checks notes] $19 billion. Reuters has the scoop here.
Lime, the nine-year-old San Francisco company that operates short-term electric bike and scooter rentals, is seeking a valuation of up to $1.66 billion in its U.S. IPO, with the Uber-backed company and some selling shareholders aiming to raise as much as $181.9 million. Reuters has more here.
People
After the market learned that John Jumper, the Nobel Prize-winning Google DeepMind researcher best known for AlphaFold, was leaving for Anthropic (marking Google’s second major AI researcher departure in a week after Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer left for OpenAI), it sent Alphabet’s shares tumbling as much as 7%. Quartz has more here.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is pushing for a more open, cheaper AI model in which customers can choose among lower-cost systems, run autonomous agents such as Copilot Cowork inside environments they control, and avoid becoming dependent on a handful of frontier-model companies. The Wall Street Journal has more here.
Claude Code creator Boris Cherny says AI coding is moving from agents that write code to “loops” in which agents continuously prompt and supervise other agents to improve code bases, a shift he argues could be as significant as the move from hand-written source code to agentic programming. TechCrunch has more here.
Layoffs
Lucid Motors is cutting 18% of its workforce – or about 1,500 employees – and eliminating a second production shift at its Arizona factory as new CEO Silvio Napoli tries to simplify the EV maker and align production with demand. TechCrunch has more here.
New filings reveal Oracle reduced its workforce in fiscal 2026 by 13% – or about 21,000 employees – as the cloud computing company restructured its business and adopted more AI across its operations. TechCrunch takes a look at the other tech companies to lay off thousands in the name of AI.
Post-Its
Essential Reads
In a rare joint statement, cybersecurity agencies from the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand warned that frontier AI models could transform offensive and defensive cyber capabilities within months, not years, urging businesses and governments to treat AI-enabled cyber risk as an urgent strategic threat. The Guardian has more here.
Getty Images struck a multiyear display deal to bring its licensed photos into ChatGPT’s search and discovery experiences, sending its beaten-down stock shooting up 90%, though the agreement does not publicly say whether Getty’s images can be used to train future OpenAI models. Forbes has more here.
Private equity investors are using AI-generated replicas of software products to test whether takeover targets have a defensible edge, with Bain consultants “vibecoding” hundreds of rough prototypes to gauge how easily a company’s product could be copied or reshaped by AI. The Financial Times has more here.
Meta accidentally exposed potentially sensitive internal data from its employee laptop-tracking program to anyone inside the company, including information believed to include keystrokes, mouse clicks, screen content, private conversations, prompts, transcriptions, and performance data. Wired has more here.
Detours
More than a half-million French high school students sat for the country’s four-hour annual philosophy exam, a national rite of passage treated seriously enough that local news outlets live-blog the questions and invite philosophers to debate them on radio, television, and in newspapers.
New York magazine rounds up this summer’s Hamptons gossip, including a Southampton market selling $150 bottles of hand-pressed Japanese grape juice, $25 sandos made with cultish Ginza Nishikawa milk bread, $400 melons, and a proposed sewage facility that would force the local dog park to move, much to the Nextdoor crowd’s dismay.
Brain Rot
Retail Therapy

Image Credits: Evan Joseph for Corcoran
A duplex penthouse atop the historic Chatsworth building on Manhattan’s Upper West Side has listed for $21.95 million, offering 6,000 square feet of interiors, five en suite bedrooms, Hudson River and skyline views, and 3,700 square feet of private terraces with a pergola, outdoor kitchen, and dining areas.
Tips (the non-pecuniary kind)
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