The money is flowing into hospitality tech at a record pace. But not all AI is created equal. Here is how to read the landscape—and where the real battles are being fought.
As legacy brands scramble to acquire technology startups and asset-light operators crash into bankruptcy, artificial intelligence is redrawing the battle lines in one of the world’s oldest industries
Multiple pivots since the sports gambling firm launched in 2021 have paid off with a $500 million valuation. Now it is chasing federal approval—and industry heavyweights Kalshi and Polymarket.
As investors double down on the promise of automating legal work, the company is in talks to raise $400 million following two rounds in late 2025.
The new project, called Material Scale, will initially focus on climate tech startups in the apparel industry.
With cancer rising in adults under 50, startups like Prenuvo push whole-body MRI and AI screening. Can preventive diagnostics catch disease earlier?
Hauler Hero has seen its customer base, revenue, and head count double since the company raised its seed round in 2024.
Garner Health uses data to identify the country’s best doctors based on quality and cost, then gives its customers’ employees financial incentives to go to them — which can save 12% on healthcare costs.
The startup, which develops AI software for lawyers and big law firms, is raising additional capital, increasing its valuation from $8 billion just two months ago.
As artificial intelligence continues to reshape industries at an unprecedented pace, venture capitalists face a critical knowledge gap: understanding how humans and AI systems collaborate most effectively. While most VCs have mastered the financial and…