Uber takes stake in SoftBank-backed self-driving tech startup Wayve

Uber takes stake in SoftBank-backed self-driving tech startup Wayve


Wayve CEO and co-founder Alex Kendall.

Wayve

LONDON — Uber and British artificial intelligence startup Wayve announced a partnership Thursday that will see the two firms collaborate on autonomous driving technology.

As part of the deal, Uber is also investing an undisclosed amount into Wayve for a minority stake, the companies said in a statement. The investment is an extension of Wayve’s $1 billion Series C funding round announced earlier this year, which was led by Japanese tech investor SoftBank.

U.S. chipmaker Nvidia and software giant Microsoft also invested in Wayve’s Series C.

“Wayve is building a ‘general purpose’ driving Al that can power all levels of driving automation in any type of vehicle, anywhere in the world,” Alex Kendall, Wayve’s co-founder and CEO, said in the statement.

He said that, together with Uber, Wayve is “excited to work with Automotive OEMs [original equipment makers] to bring autonomous driving technologies to consumers sooner.”

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi added that the two companies “share a vision of reimagining mobility for the better.”

“Wayve’s advanced Embodied AI approach holds a ton of promise as we work towards a world where modern vehicles are shared, electric and autonomous,” Khosrowshahi said.

Uber will integrate Wayve’s AV2.0 technology — an algorithm-based product that enables vehicles to drive themselves using data from the physical environment — into consumer vehicles “to enable a range of automated driving capabilities,” according to the statement.

Wayve’s AV2.0 product is an end-to-end AI solution that allows automakers to equip existing vehicles with Level 2+ advanced driver assistance and Level 3 and 4 automated driving capabilities.

Different levels of vehicle autonomy are determined by SAE International, a global standards body for the mobility engineering industry.

In the future, Uber intends to launch self-driving vehicles on its app equipped with Wayve’s tech, the companies said.

Previously, Uber had its own self-driving car unit, but it sold the division in 2020 to Aurora Technologies, an Amazon-backed self-driving car firm. As part of that deal, Uber said it would invest $400 million into Aurora.

The ride-sharing giant recently announced a similar tie-up with Cruise, a General Motors-backed autonomous driving startup, to offer driverless rides on its ride-hailing network.

Uber has also offered rides in vehicles operated by Waymo, the Google self-driving spinoff, as part of a commercial tie-up. In 2019, Waymo announced a similar partnership with Lyft, a competitor to Uber.



Source

Salesforce’s Agentforce software is coming to OpenAI’s ChatGPT
Technology

Salesforce’s Agentforce software is coming to OpenAI’s ChatGPT

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff participates in an interview during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 22, 2025. Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images Salesforce is ramping up partnerships with leaders in generative artificial intelligence as investors continue to fear that the software company faces business risks due to the rapid growth […]

Read More
Meta removes Facebook page allegedly used to target ICE agents after pressure from DOJ
Technology

Meta removes Facebook page allegedly used to target ICE agents after pressure from DOJ

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during a roundtable on “Antifa,” an anti-fascist movement he designated a domestic “terrorist organization” via executive order on September 22, at the White House in Washington, D.C., Oct. 8, 2025. Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters Meta removed a Facebook group page on Tuesday that was allegedly used to “dox and […]

Read More
OpenAI forms expert council to bolster safety measures after FTC inquiry
Technology

OpenAI forms expert council to bolster safety measures after FTC inquiry

OpenAI’s EMEA startups head Laura Modiano spoke at the Sifted Summit on Wednesday, 8 October. Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images OpenAI on Tuesday announced a council of eight experts who will advise the company and provide insight into how artificial intelligence could affect users’ mental health, emotions and motivation.  The group, which is called […]

Read More