HomeArtificial IntelligenceGrok's image generator Black Forest Labs raises $100 million at $1 billion...

Grok's image generator Black Forest Labs raises $100 million at $1 billion valuation, sources say

While OpenAI is once more aiming for an enormous capital raise, it's not stealing everyone's breath: AI startups that develop promising baseline models can still open doors and checkbooks. Multiple sources have told us that Black Forest Labs – a startup that develops generative AI image models and emerged from obscurity two months ago with $31 million in funding – is closing a brand new round of funding. We're hearing a couple of $100 million round at a $1 billion valuation. The deal might not be final yet, so it's subject to vary.

Black Forest isn't just any AI startup: The company was co-founded by the engineers who developed the technology behind Stability AI. And it has a big-name customer. Elon Musk's X.ai uses Black Forest's text-to-image model Flux.1 to power image generation in its chatbot Grok. This is a service that got people chatting immediately after its launch, partly due to daring results people were achieving with it.

Photo credits: Screenshot
Photo credits: Screenshot

“No filters” still appears to be relevant a month later. We took the image on the best earlier this week.

The company can also be attracting investors' attention due to its founders and founding team, which incorporates Andreas Blattmann, Patrick Esser, Dominik Lorenz and CEO Robin Rombach – researchers who developed Stability AI, a groundbreaking platform for image generation.

“Robin Rombach is taken into account an absolute expert in image diffusion models and when you will have someone that smart and that proven in a brand latest area, it's obvious that it’s best to invest once you get the possibility,” considered one of the corporate's investors told TechCrunch.

It's not yet entirely clear who’s investing within the Freiburg-based startup's latest round. One source mentioned that Lightspeed – one of the prolific AI investors in Europe, backing Helsing, Mistral, Stability AI and others – may very well be involved. Lightspeed has not yet responded to a request for comment, nor has Black Forest itself. (We'll update the post in the event that they do.)

The company's previous round of $31 million included a listing of high-profile investors, led by Andreessen Horowitz, others, per PitchBook dataincluded General Catalyst and Stuttgart-based VC Mätch.vc, in addition to Timo Aila from Nvidia, Oculus co-founder Brendan Iribe, Apple AI researcher Vladlen Koltun, entertainment mogul Michael Ovitz and Garry Tan from Y Combinator.

The $1 billion valuation is an enormous jump from the last round's post-money valuation, which was a more modest $150 million. (Asked about additional funding, Andreessen Horowitz declined to comment for this story.)

Rapid fundraising within the generative AI space has grow to be fairly commonplace in the present market: startups developing these tools need the funds to purchase computers, hire talent, perhaps sign IP licensing deals, and for marketing and business development to compete against larger and even higher funded players. In the case of Black Forest Labs, more technology launches are coming soon. The company has already said it really works on a cutting-edge text-to-video tool with a yet to be announced debut date.

But the market has been treacherous and sometimes unkind to a few of the smaller AI players which have raised big money and are actually under pressure to deliver. H in Paris, a generative AI startup founded by DeepMind graduates, raised $220 million in May this 12 months. It has already lost three of its five co-founders, reportedly over Operational differencesAleph Alpha, which has raised greater than $500 million, appears swiveling to enterprise services through constructing foundational models.

“Make the headlines, be put within the highlight, but not deliver,” is how one other investor told TechCrunch, describing the predicament facing corporations like Aleph Alpha and H.

Black Forest Labs will, after all, attempt to avoid such problems, especially since – at the least for now – it lacks a strategic investor who could back the corporate with huge amounts of cash to grow more aggressively. The same investor said: “I believe they may attempt to go the opposite way, which is to stay as secretive as possible.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Must Read