AI startup Baseten raises $75 million following DeepSeek’s emergence

AI startup Baseten raises  million following DeepSeek’s emergence


Baseten, a startup that runs artificial intelligence models for clients on their cloud infrastructure, has raised $75 million in funding, the company said Wednesday.

The funding round values Baseten at $825 million and demonstrates that venture capitalists believe tech’s AI boom stands to benefit a plethora of startups, not just those building large language models. In recent months, OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI have raised billions in funding, with much of the money going toward servers containing Nvidia graphics processing units, or GPUs.

After companies finish training AI models on reams of data, they need to deploy those models somewhere at the inference stage, which is when models generate outputs in response to user queries. That’s when Baseten comes in.

Rather than run its own data centers, Baseten runs its software on data center equipment from cloud providers, including Amazon and Google. Customers can supply their own infrastructure with an enterprise tier. By drawing from multiple providers, Baseten offers access to more GPUs than a single cloud’s current supply.

“In this market, your No. 1 differentiation is how fast you can move. That is the core benefit for our customers,” co-founder and CEO Tuhin Srivastava said. “You can go to production without worrying about reliability, security and performance.”

Companies can manage the deployment of their models without Baseten, but securing enough Nvidia chips in the right geographical areas can prove difficult, co-founder Amir Haghighat told CNBC.

Cloud providers sometimes inform customers that some GPUs will be moved into maintenance mode and become unavailable within minutes. Baseten helps its clients handle those instances without interruptions, Srivastava said.

After the January breakthrough of Chinese AI lab DeepSeek, which claimed its models were trained for a fraction of the costs as its U.S. counterparts, efficiency in AI has become more important than ever.

Baseten was quick to add support for DeepSeek’s R1 reasoning model that compares to OpenAI’s o1. Baseten’s website promises top-tier performance at a fraction of OpenAI’s cost. There has been a lot of inbound from organizations looking at switching to DeepSeek, and Baseten has been busy trying to keep up, Srivastava said.

“There are a lot of people paying millions of dollars per quarter to OpenAI and Anthropic that are thinking, ‘How can I save money?'” he said. “And they’ve flocked.”

Baseten clients often see their inference costs fall 40% or more, while receiving better performance, in comparison with homegrown architectures, head of marketing Mike Bilodeau wrote in an email.

The startup’s revenue for the fiscal year that ended in January was six times more than it was in the prior year, Srivastava said, without providing a dollar figure.

Founded in 2019 and based in San Francisco, Baseten has about 60 employees. Existing investors IVP and Spark Capital led the new round, with others participating. More than 100 enterprises are customers, along with hundreds of smaller companies, such as Descript, Patreon and Writer.

Competitors include Salesforce-backed Together AI. Another challenge is that Baseten must compete with AI model companies and hedge funds for talent.

“Having more money in somewhat of a weird economic environment, it does not hurt,” Srivastava said.



Source

Waymo offers teen accounts for driverless rides
Technology

Waymo offers teen accounts for driverless rides

Waymo announced it is now offering teen accounts for its self-driving car service Waymo One, beginning in Phoenix, Arizona. Courtesy of Waymo Waymo announced Tuesday that it is offering accounts for teens ages 14 to 17, starting in Phoenix. The Alphabet-owned company said that, beginning Tuesday, parents in Phoenix can use their Waymo accounts “to invite […]

Read More
Elon Musk’s X says Indian government ordered over 2,000 accounts blocked, including Reuters
Technology

Elon Musk’s X says Indian government ordered over 2,000 accounts blocked, including Reuters

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrives at the White House to meet with U.S. President Donald Trump on Feb. 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. Andrew Harnik | Getty Images News | Getty Images Elon Musk’s X said Tuesday that the Indian government ordered the company to block 2,355 accounts, including Reuters, in the country. “The […]

Read More
Southeast Asia needn’t take sides in US-China tech rivalry. It can learn from both, experts say
Technology

Southeast Asia needn’t take sides in US-China tech rivalry. It can learn from both, experts say

A woman holds a cell phone featuring the DeepSeek logo, with the Nvidia logo displayed in the background. Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images As China and the U.S. compete in artificial intelligence, Southeast Asia should draw from the best of both countries while building its own technologies, panelists said at CNBC’s East Tech West […]

Read More