- France-based AI initiative, Mistral AI, raises $415m in funding.
- AI industry sees an increasing number of different players.
- The company aims to launch its products by early 2024.
Artificial intelligence technology leads many companies to take steps, resulting in an increasing number of different players in the sector every day. Accordingly, France-based artificial intelligence (AI) initiative Mistral AI announced that it collected 385 million euros, equivalent to $415 million, in its latest funding round aimed at developing its technology and open-source software.
American venture capital company Andreessen Horowitz and the company’s first backers, Lightspeed Ventures, led the round that took place on December 11th. This follows Mistral’s previous funding round in the early summer, where it raised $113 million in seed funding. Current evaluations suggest that the company is now worth approximately $2 billion.
Mistral AI draws attention in this field by focusing on its open-source technology for productive AI tools, chatbot development, and customizable applications. The company’s officials aim to offer their products to users’ approval by the beginning of 2024. Furthermore, the company being founded in May by former executives of Google DeepMind and Meta is another focal point. Mistral AI’s CEO Arthur Mensch shared the following statements about the latest funding round:
“Since Mistral AI’s establishment in May, we have been following a clear trajectory; to create a European champion in the field of productive artificial intelligence based on an approach that is open to technology, responsible, and non-centralized.”
In addition to all these developments, European Union legal regulators reached an agreement historically described on artificial intelligence requirements on Friday, December 8. The agreement touches on many aspects of the artificial intelligence sector, including government use for biometric surveillance and legal regulation of powerful AI models such as ChatGPT, including transparency requirements before entering the public market.
The agreement also covers elements intersecting with other areas of European Union legal legislation, such as copyright issues and educational applications. These steps lead to significant developments in the security and reliability principles of the artificial intelligence sector, which began with Chat GPT.