Multiverse’s scaling demonstrates that energy‑efficient AI can achieve commercial viability, reshaping cost structures for enterprises and accelerating adoption of responsible AI practices.
Multiverse’s approach to model compression tackles one of the most pressing challenges in artificial intelligence: the soaring energy and hardware demands of large language models. By pruning parameters and leveraging quantization techniques, the company can deliver near‑original performance while dramatically lowering power consumption. This not only reduces operational expenditures for corporate AI teams but also aligns with broader ESG goals, making AI projects more palatable to sustainability‑focused stakeholders.
The imminent €500 million financing round reflects a broader shift in venture capital toward climate‑conscious tech. Investors are increasingly valuing startups that can prove both technical merit and measurable carbon savings. Multiverse’s €1.5 billion valuation places it among Europe’s most valuable AI firms, signaling confidence that sustainable model architectures will become a market differentiator. The capital infusion is expected to accelerate product development, expand go‑to‑market teams across Europe and North America, and deepen partnerships with cloud providers seeking greener workloads.
Demand for cost‑effective AI is accelerating as enterprises embed generative models into customer service, analytics, and product design. Multiverse’s technology offers a competitive edge against larger cloud AI vendors by enabling on‑premise deployments with lower total cost of ownership. As regulatory pressure mounts on data‑center emissions, companies that can deliver comparable AI capabilities with reduced compute footprints will likely capture a larger share of the AI services market. Multiverse’s growth trajectory suggests it could set a new standard for sustainable AI scaling, prompting rivals to adopt similar compression strategies.
Techmeme: Sources: Spain‑based Multiverse, which shrinks LLMs to reduce energy and compute costs, is in talks to raise ~€500 M at a €1.5 B+ valuation and has hit €100 M ARR (Bloomberg)
Date: February 10, 2026 12:00 PM
Tony Wu, one of xAI’s co‑founders, announced his resignation from Elon Musk’s AI company. Wu had been in charge of reasoning and reported directly to Musk. The departure follows co‑founder Igor Babuschkin’s exit in August 2025.
“I resigned from xAI today. This company – and the family we became – will stay with me forever. I will deeply miss the people, the warrooms, and all those battles we have fought together. It’s time for my next chapter. It is an era with full possibilities: a small team armed.” – Tony Wu (Twitter)
Other commentary:
“They’re dropping like AI company co‑founders.” – Alexia Bonatsos
“Another xAI co‑founder leaves the company. (caveat of there’s lots of movement among AI execs)” – Hadas Gold
“Tony Wu is the fourth co‑founder to leave xAI in the past year. He led the reasoning org and began reporting to Elon Musk last year. XAI underwent a reorg a few weeks ago and co‑founder Guodong Zhang took over some of Wu’s responsibilities, insiders said.” – Grace Kay
The UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) announced that Apple and Google have agreed to a package of commitments aimed at improving fairness for developers and consumers. The commitments include greater transparency, clearer rules for app‑store operations, and steps to enhance iOS interoperability.
Key points from the announcements:
Apple will provide clearer guidance on app‑store policies and improve the appeals process for developers.
Google will make its Play Store rules more transparent and will allow alternative payment options in certain cases.
Both companies will work with the CMA to monitor compliance and report progress regularly.
Spotify Technology S.A. posted a robust fourth‑quarter 2025 earnings report:
Revenue up 13 % YoY to €4.5 B.
Premium subscribers up 10 % YoY to 290 M.
Monthly active users (MAUs) up 11 % YoY to 751 M.
Operating income €701 M, beating the €639.1 M estimate.
The company highlighted record user growth driven by its “Wrapped” campaign, new free‑feature offerings, and expanded audiobooks. Co‑CEOs emphasized that AI represents “an enormous opportunity” for Spotify to become more than just a music platform.
“We closed out Q4 2025 with strong user growth and continued momentum. From our biggest Wrapped ever, to Prompted Playlist, and expanding audiobooks to new markets, we’re focused on delivering value for users, artists, creators and authors.” – Spotify (Twitter)
Singapore’s government has identified the Chinese‑linked advanced persistent threat (APT) group UNC3886 as the actor behind a months‑long cyber‑espionage campaign that targeted the nation’s four largest telecommunications providers.
The multi‑agency operation, coordinated by the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore, aimed to counter the threat and secure the telecom sector’s infrastructure.
Key findings:
UNC3886 conducted extensive reconnaissance and exploited vulnerabilities in network equipment to gain access to sensitive data.
The campaign lasted approximately 11 months before being disrupted.
Singapore has taken steps to harden its telecom networks and is working with international partners to mitigate future threats.
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