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The official channel of V3V Ventures. We share updates on our investments, portfolio companies, and fund activities. Buy Ads: @strategy (this is our only account).
نمایش بیشتر2025 سال در اعداد

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✅ Suno hits a $2.45B valuation as investors double down on AI-generated music
Suno has raised a new round valuing the AI-music startup at $2.45 billion, a sharp jump that comes as the company faces both explosive demand and mounting legal pressure from major record labels.
🖱 The company is generating more than $200M in annual revenue, driven largely by paid subscribers using its AI to produce fully-finished songs.
🖱 Investors include Menlo Ventures, NVentures (Nvidia), Lightspeed, and Matrix, a lineup signaling strong confidence in Suno’s claim that its music is original, not derivative.
🖱 The valuation arrives as Suno fights lawsuits from Universal, Warner, and Sony, who argue the model was trained on copyrighted tracks without permission.
🖱 Suno is rolling out new pro-grade tools like Suno Studio, betting that AI-first music creation will shift from novelty to mainstream workflow.
If Suno wins the legal battles, it won’t just be a top AI-music app, it could redefine how the entire music industry thinks about creation, ownership, and compensation.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 Meta wins major antitrust case as judge rules it’s not a monopoly
A federal judge has rejected the FTC’s long-running attempt to force Meta to unwind Instagram and WhatsApp, ruling that the agency failed to prove Meta currently holds monopoly power.
🖱 The court said the social market has shifted, with TikTok, YouTube, and others weakening the FTC’s “personal social networking” monopoly claim.
🖱 Internal Zuckerberg emails about buying Instagram to “buy time” surfaced, but the judge said historic intent doesn’t equal present-day monopoly status.
🖱 The decision means no breakup, no divestitures, and a major relief for Meta after five years of litigation.
🖱 Regulators now face a tougher path, as the ruling signals courts want broader, updated definitions for tech competition.
This outcome doesn’t just protect Instagram and WhatsApp , it reshapes how future antitrust fights against Big Tech will be argued.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 Anthony Pompliano could secure a huge performance payout as ProCap heads toward a public listing
Unchained Crypto reports that Anthony “Pomp” Pompliano may earn up to $400M through a results-based compensation plan tied to ProCap’s upcoming SPAC listing, a striking move for a firm that only recently closed $750M in fresh capital.
🖱 ProCap is positioning itself as a bitcoin-first investment company, already accumulating over 3,700 BTC and signaling plans to expand its holdings toward the $1B mark.
🖱 Pompliano’s potential reward isn’t guaranteed, it’s modeled as a high-risk, high-upside package that only unlocks if the public company hits ambitious performance and asset-growth milestones.
🖱 The structure reflects a broader shift in finance: founder compensation increasingly mirrors tech-style incentive models where massive upside is tied to extreme execution.
ProCap isn’t just going public, it’s making a bold bet that a bitcoin-centric balance-sheet strategy can become a mainstream, institutional investment model.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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📚 Why you should read investing books, even before you start investing
Money is losing value faster than ever, and most people wait too long to learn how to manage it. But capital management is one of the few skills that compounds for life and the easiest way to build it early is by reading the right investing books.
Here are the TOP-5 beginner-friendly picks for 2024–2025:
🖱 Just Keep Buying — Nick Maggiulli: A motivating guide to long-term, systematic investing and why short-term fear kills returns.
🖱 Investing 101 — Michelle Cagan: A clear breakdown of stocks, bonds, ETFs, IPOs great for anyone starting from zero.
🖱 Stock Market 101 — Michelle Cagan: A practical intro to buying stocks, understanding markets, and avoiding rookie mistakes.
🖱 Rule No. 1 Investing — Phil Town: A simple framework for value investing using fundamentals without needing hours each week.
🖱 The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing: A modern classic on passive, low-cost index investing and building a long-term portfolio.
New additions worth reading too:
• The Algebra of Wealth — Scott Galloway (2024): a formula for financial security built on focus, time, stoicism, and diversification.
• Mango Millionaire — Radhika Gupta: a personal finance guide rooted in daily habits, budgeting, and realistic money management.
Investing begins long before the first dollar hits the market, it starts with learning how money actually works.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🤖 Will artificial womb robots become the next frontier of human reproduction?
A growing debate online has erupted after a Chinese robotics company revealed plans for a humanoid machine designed to carry a human embryo to term using a synthetic uterus, engineered amniotic fluid, and a plastic umbilical cord.
🖱 Early claims suggest the first consumer version could appear as soon as next year, priced around mid-range appliance levels. The company says the vision isn’t to assist pregnancy it’s to replace it entirely, shifting gestation from humans to machines.
🖱 Scientists and bioethicists are raising alarms: we don’t know how a synthetic womb replicates hormonal signaling, whether brain development is safe in an artificial environment, or what psychological consequences might emerge for children born from a device rather than a human body.
🖱 The ethical stakes are enormous. If robotic gestation becomes real, who holds parental responsibility? What rights does a child have when the “mother” was a machine? And does this technology open the door to industrialized reproduction?
As biology, robotics, and ethics collide, the question hangs in the air: is this a breakthrough in human freedom or a line civilization isn’t ready to cross?✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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Will artificial womb robots become the next frontier of human reproduction?
A growing debate online has erupted after a Chinese robotics company revealed plans for a humanoid machine designed to carry a human embryo to term using a synthetic uterus, engineered amniotic fluid, and a plastic umbilical cord.
🤖 Early claims suggest the first consumer version could appear as soon as next year, priced around mid-range appliance levels. The company says the vision isn’t to assist pregnancy — it’s to replace it entirely, shifting gestation from humans to machines.
🧪 Scientists and bioethicists are raising alarms: we don’t know how a synthetic womb replicates hormonal signaling, whether brain development is safe in an artificial environment, or what psychological consequences might emerge for children born from a device rather than a human body.
⚖️ The ethical stakes are enormous. If robotic gestation becomes real, who holds parental responsibility? What rights does a child have when the “mother” was a machine? And does this technology open the door to industrialized reproduction?
As biology, robotics, and ethics collide, the question hangs in the air: is this a breakthrough in human freedom — or a line civilization isn’t ready to cross?
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🔬 Sam Altman launches Episteme, a “new kind of R&D lab” for long-horizon science
Sam Altman and Lewis Andre have founded Episteme, an organization built to attract top researchers and give them full freedom to pursue high-impact scientific breakthroughs without academic bureaucracy or corporate pressures.
🖱 Episteme plans to hire exceptional scientists across physics, biology, computation, and energy fields where long-term research is often underfunded but can unlock massive breakthroughs.
🖱 Researchers get infrastructure, resources, and support, plus equity in the company, positioning them more like founders than employees.
🖱 The pitch: industry demands fast results, academia lacks funding Episteme fills the gap by backing bold, high-risk scientific ideas that could redefine entire sectors.
🖱 While the mission emphasizes “impact for humanity,” the focus areas also align with domains that could generate enormous economic value if successful.
If Episteme can actually attract world-class talent and keep its promise of true freedom, it may become the place where the next generation of deep-tech breakthroughs are born.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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📌 Bezos returns to the trenches as co-CEO of $6.2B AI startup Project Prometheus
According to The New York Times, Jeff Bezos is taking on his first operational role since leaving Amazon, becoming co-CEO of Project Prometheus, an AI startup that has already secured a massive $6.2B in early funding.
🖱 Bezos will lead the company alongside Vik Bajaj, a physicist and former Google X executive, signaling that Prometheus aims to fuse deep science with frontier-model engineering.
🖱 The startup focuses on “AI for the physical economy,” building systems for aerospace, manufacturing, automotive, and advanced computing, areas tied tightly to Bezos’s long-term industrial and space ambitions.
🖱 Prometheus has quietly hired top talent from OpenAI, DeepMind, and Meta, assembling a 100-person team before even launching a product, an unusual scale that mirrors its outsized funding.
🖱 The company’s backers see industrial AI as the next trillion-dollar frontier, where software isn’t just generating text but redesigning machines, factories, and physical infrastructure.
Bezos isn’t merely backing another AI lab, he’s positioning Prometheus as a deep-tech powerhouse that could reshape how the physical world itself gets engineered.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 Peter Thiel dumps all his Nvidia shares as “AI bubble” fears intensify
Billionaire investor Peter Thiel has sold his entire Nvidia position, roughly 537,000 shares that made up 40% of his fund shifting capital into Microsoft, Apple, and partially Tesla.
🖱 Thiel has repeatedly warned that the current AI boom lacks real economic fundamentals, comparing Nvidia’s surge to the late-90s dot-com bubble.
🖱 SoftBank is also exiting its Nvidia stake, signaling growing caution among major institutions watching valuations stretch to extremes.
🖱 Michael Burry, famous for predicting the 2008 crisis, is shorting Nvidia with 14% of his portfolio, one of his largest macro bets in years.
When heavyweight investors start stepping back at the same time, it may be the first real sign that the AI trade is entering its “late-cycle psychology” phase.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🚐 Global EV market: Chinese manufacturers tighten their grip on worldwide sales
Here’s the latest snapshot of the global electric-vehicle market by manufacturer, counting both BEVs and PHEVs and for Chinese brands, including both domestic and global deliveries.
🖱 BYD dominates with more than 3.8M EVs delivered last year, giving it over 22% of the global market, fueled by massive PHEV volume and fast-growing exports.
🖱 Tesla holds the BEV crown, but its overall EV share continues to slide as Chinese brands scale aggressively across both pure electric and hybrid segments.
🖱 GAC Aion, SAIC-GM-Wuling, Geely, and MG now sit firmly in the global top tier, collectively capturing double-digit market share and reshaping the competitive landscape.
🖱 Chinese automakers benefit from extreme manufacturing scale, vertically integrated supply chains, and lower battery costs giving them a pricing edge global rivals can’t match.
The center of gravity in the EV world has shifted decisively: China isn’t just competing in electric mobility, it’s setting the tempo for the entire global market.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 Amazon vs. Perplexity agents: the first real battle over AI autonomy
Everyone covered Amazon’s demand that Perplexity’s Comet browser stop its agents from making purchases on Amazon. Almost no one covered Perplexity’s sharp public response which raised a far bigger question: what actually changes when a human hands their authority to an AI agent instead of a human assistant?
🖱 If you ask a human assistant to buy something for you online using your accounts, your logins, even your cards, no platform objects. It’s normal, accepted, and even encouraged for high-value customers.
🖱 But when the same authority is transferred to a software agent, suddenly platforms want bans, restrictions, and legal intervention.
🖱 The reason: for decades, software was a tool. With agentic AI, software becomes labor, an employee acting on your behalf, making decisions and completing tasks.
🖱 And platforms hate this shift. An AI agent can’t be manipulated by ads, banners, fake urgency, or cross-sell tricks. It doesn’t click promos. It doesn’t “browse.” It simply executes the user’s intent and nothing more.
If user agents take over online commerce, they break the core business model of today’s platforms: capturing attention, nudging behavior, and monetizing distraction.
Expect a long and messy fight because AI agents work for the user, not the platform, and that threatens an entire advertising-driven internet economy.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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⚠️ South Korea plans a $35B AI-run megadata center, what could possibly go wrong?
South Korea is launching Project Concord, a $35 billion initiative to build a data center that will be fully designed, optimized, and operated by AI from start to finish.
🖱 AI will select the construction site, design engineering systems, plan cooling, and manage power optimization.
🖱 During operations, AI will oversee monitoring, detect failures, and handle troubleshooting with minimal human intervention.
🖱 The planned capacity is ~3 gigawatts, placing it among the largest hyperscale facilities ever attempted.
🖱 Construction is targeted for 2028, with the entire lifecycle design to daily ops delegated to automated decision-making.
If this works, it sets a new bar for autonomous infrastructure but if it fails, we may learn why humans still like to keep a hand on the power switch.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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📊 Crypto Venture Weekly: November 10–14, 2025
$136M was raised across 12 projects this week, led by Lighter ($68M) and LISA ($12M). Meanwhile, Strive, VCI Global, Cypherpunk, Upexi, and Strategy collectively deployed $412M into digital asset treasuries across BTC, ZEC, and other holdings.
Here’s what the top 8 are building 👇
🖱 Lighter ($68M, Founders Fund, Ribbit, Haun, Robinhood)
Ethereum-based ZK rollup for perpetual futures, valued at $1.5B.
🖱 LISA ($12M, NGC, Signum, LongHash, UOB Ventures)
AI agent using LLMs to autonomously analyze and audit smart contracts.
🖱 Acurast ($11M, CoinList, Tezos Foundation, Web3 Foundation, Peaq)
Decentralized compute network leveraging smartphones as nodes.
🖱 Seismic ($10M, a16z, Polychain, Amber, dao5, LayerZero)
Encrypted blockchain platform rearchitecting open-source infrastructure around secure hardware.
🖱 Self ($9M, Sandeep Nailwal, Greenfield, Hart Lambur)
Private, verifiable identity protocol enabling self-sovereign digital access.
🖱 Curvance ($4M, Primal, F-Prime, GSR, Flowdesk)
DeFi lending platform simplifying institutional yield access.
🖱 Shodai Network ($2.5M, Consensys Mesh, Joseph Lubin)
Founder network and fundraising platform for early-stage Web3 startups.
🖱 Takadao ($1.5M, Draper, Adaverse, Wahed Ventures)
Bankless finance ecosystem operating from Riyadh and Singapore.
Investor focus this week circled around AI-integrated smart contract tools, ZK-powered infrastructure, and stablecoin-driven finance, while steady treasury allocations signaled continued institutional conviction amid a quieter funding climate.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 The Barbell Venture Market: Why startups are splitting into two extremes
Parul Singh argues that today’s venture ecosystem is no longer a smooth curve, it’s a barbell, with winners clustering at two ends and almost nothing in the middle.
🖱 On one side: hyper-efficient, small teams building $10–20M ARR businesses with high margins, startups that don’t need much capital yet create huge personal outcomes for founders.
🖱 On the other: massive, high-upside, capital-hungry companies that justify big funds’ moonshot bets, the only place where large checks still make sense.
🖱 The “middle” (mid-burn, mid-scale, not fast enough to be a rocket) is becoming uninvestable, squeezed by both market discipline and shifting VC incentives.
The result: venture is polarizing, and founders must choose a lane, either build lean and profitable or swing big because the market increasingly rewards only the extremes.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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Virgin Galactic’s space dream crashes back to Earth
In 2020, Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic vowed to kick off a new era of space tourism. Instead, the company stalled and its stock has since collapsed by 99%, leaving early believers with nothing but cosmic disappointment.
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🥸 OpenAI forced to hand over 20M user chats in NYT lawsuit
A federal judge has ordered OpenAI to provide 20 million anonymized user conversations to The New York Times as part of the newspaper’s copyright case, rejecting the company’s attempts to limit disclosure.
🖱 NYT argues ChatGPT reproduces protected articles, prompting a sweeping data request to examine how the model handles copyrighted text.
🖱 OpenAI pushed back, saying 99.99% of the chats are irrelevant and proposing a narrow, selective disclosure, the court rejected the plan.
🖱 The judge ruled that anonymization and a protective order are enough to safeguard user privacy, despite OpenAI’s warnings about overreach.
🖱 OpenAI has filed a motion to reconsider, but for now the company must comply and prepare the dataset for imminent handover.
If this stands, it could set a precedent where courts can demand vast AI usage logs, reshaping the boundaries of privacy, transparency, and copyright enforcement in the AI era.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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❓ Should young founders learn etiquette or just build?
Slow Ventures’ Sam Lessin has launched an unusual initiative in San Francisco: an “Etiquette School” for young founders. What started as a joke turned into a full program and even sparked a mini-drama with Y Combinator’s CEO.
🖱 Lessin says many first-time founders drop out of school early and jump straight into startups, never learning basic etiquette or how to present themselves. When Slow Ventures opened applications, hundreds applied for a free class with only 50 spots.
🖱 The lesson took place at the Four Seasons: three hours on handshakes, investor communication, business attire, how to eat caviar, how to pick wine and why the era of wrinkled T-shirts might be ending.
🖱 But Y Combinator CEO Harry Tang wasn’t amused. He warned founders not to attend, arguing that great companies come from building things people want, not from polished manners or fancy signals. Real wealth, he argued, is built on value not vibes.
In a world where founders need both authenticity and influence, is etiquette a distraction from the grind or a hidden advantage in high-stakes rooms?✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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🔔 Cursor raises a massive $2.3B just five months after its previous round
According to TechCrunch, AI coding assistant Cursor has closed a new $2.3 billion round, catapulting its valuation to $29.3B, barely five months after raising $900M at a $10B valuation.
🖱 The round was co-led by Accel and Coatue, with strategic backing from Nvidia and Google, a signal that AI-powered developer tools have become core infrastructure.
🖱 Cursor’s team plans to pour the new capital into “Composer,” its in-house AI model, aiming to reduce reliance on external LLMs and build a fully proprietary coding stack.
🖱 The valuation tripling in under half a year underscores hyperspeed adoption: investors see AI-native coding environments as the next major productivity platform for developers.
Cursor isn’t just raising capital, it’s becoming the flagship bet that AI-first software engineering could rewrite how the world builds software.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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⚡️ Pavel Durov’s French travel ban is officially lifted as probe continues
French investigators have fully lifted the travel restrictions previously imposed on Telegram founder Pavel Durov, even as their inquiry into potential criminal activity facilitated via the platform remains active.
🖱 The ban, which initially confined Durov to France and later allowed limited travel to Dubai, has now been completely removed, restoring his freedom of movement while the investigation proceeds.
🖱 Prosecutors are examining whether Telegram’s design and policies enabled criminal offences, though Durov has not been charged. The platform’s encryption-first philosophy has long drawn scrutiny from European regulators.
🖱 The decision does not signal the end of the case: investigators continue probing Telegram’s moderation practices and possible lapses tied to illicit activity coordinated on the app.
A telling moment: the restrictions fall away, but the regulatory spotlight remains firmly on Telegram, a reminder that privacy-first platforms are becoming central battlegrounds in Europe’s clash between encryption and oversight.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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💰 Robert Kiyosaki says he’s $1.2B in debt and calls it his best financial move
The Rich Dad Poor Dad author revealed he currently holds $1.2 billion in debt, but insists he’s not worried at all.
🖱 Kiyosaki explained that the debt is “good debt”, borrowed money used to acquire cash-flowing assets like real estate and businesses, not liabilities.
🖱 His philosophy: the rich use debt to get richer, while the poor and middle class use it to buy things that lose value.
🖱 He emphasizes that the key is who controls the debt, if your assets pay for it, you own the system; if your labor pays for it, the system owns you.
His takeaway: don’t fear debt, learn to make it work for you.✔️Powered by Trade Watcher
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