Close Menu
arabianstartup.comarabianstartup.com
    What's Hot

    Israelis and Palestinians Await Hostage-Prisoner Swap With Relief and Elation

    October 12, 2025

    3 Qatari Officials Die in Car Crash in Egypt Before Gaza Summit

    October 12, 2025

    A Test Now for Israel: Can It Repair Its Ties to Americans?

    October 12, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    arabianstartup.comarabianstartup.com
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Insights
    • Business
    • Feature
    • Market Trend
    • Startups
    arabianstartup.comarabianstartup.com
    Home » Reflection raises $2B to be America’s open frontier AI lab, challenging DeepSeek
    Startups

    Reflection raises $2B to be America’s open frontier AI lab, challenging DeepSeek

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffOctober 9, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Reflection, a startup founded just last year by two former Google DeepMind researchers, has raised $2 billion at an $8 billion valuation, a whopping 15x leap from its $545 million valuation just seven months ago. The company, which originally focused on autonomous coding agents, is now positioning itself as both an open source alternative to closed frontier labs like OpenAI and Anthropic, and a Western equivalent to Chinese AI firms like DeepSeek.

    The startup was launched in March 2024 by Misha Laskin, who led reward modeling for DeepMind’s Gemini project, and Ioannis Antonoglou, who co-created AlphaGo, the AI system that famously beat the world champion in the board game Go in 2016. Their background developing these very advanced AI systems is central to their pitch, which is that the right AI talent can build frontier models outside established tech giants.

    Along with its new round, Reflection announced that it has recruited a team of top talent from DeepMind and OpenAI, and built an advanced AI training stack that it promises will be open for all. Perhaps most importantly, Reflection says it has “identified a scalable commercial model that aligns with our open intelligence strategy.”

    Reflection’s team currently numbers about 60 people — mostly AI researchers and engineers across infrastructure, data training, and algorithm development, per Laskin, the company’s CEO. Reflection has secured a compute cluster and hopes to release a frontier language model next year that’s trained on “tens of trillions of tokens,” he told TechCrunch.

    “We built something once thought possible only inside the world’s top labs: a large-scale LLM and reinforcement learning platform capable of training massive Mixture-of-Experts (MoEs) models at frontier scale,” Reflection wrote in a post on X. “We saw the effectiveness of our approach first-hand when we applied it to the critical domain of autonomous coding. With this milestone unlocked, we’re now bringing these methods to general agentic reasoning.”

    MoE refers to a specific architecture that powers frontier LLMs — systems that, previously, only large, closed AI labs were capable of training at scale. DeepSeek had a breakthrough moment when it figured out how to train these models at scale in an open way, followed by Qwen, Kimi, and other models in China.

    “DeepSeek and Qwen and all these models are our wake up call because if we don’t do anything about it, then effectively, the global standard of intelligence will be built by someone else,” Laskin said. “It won’t be built by America.”

    Techcrunch event

    San Francisco
    |
    October 27-29, 2025

    Laskin added that this puts the U.S. and its allies at a disadvantage because enterprises and sovereign states often won’t use Chinese models due to potential legal repercussions.

    “So you can either choose to live at a competitive disadvantage or rise to the occasion,” Laskin said.

    American technologists have largely celebrated Reflection’s new mission. David Sacks, the White House AI and Crypto Czar, posted on X: “It’s great to see more American open source AI models. A meaningful segment of the global market will prefer the cost, customizability, and control that open source offers. We want the U.S. to win this category too.”

    Clem Delangue, co-founder and CEO of Hugging Face, an open and collaborative platform for AI builders, told TechCrunch of the round, “This is indeed great news for American open-source AI. Added Delangue, “Now the challenge will be to show high velocity of sharing of open AI models and datasets (similar to what we’re seeing from the labs dominating in open-source AI).”

    Reflection’s definition of being “open” seems to center on access rather than development, similar to strategies from Meta with Llama or Mistral. Laskin said Reflection would release model weights — the core parameters that determine how an AI system works — for public use while largely keeping datasets and full training pipelines proprietary.

    “In reality, the most impactful thing is the model weights, because the model weights anyone can use and start tinkering with them,” Laskin said. “The infrastructure stack, only a select handful of companies can actually use that.”

    That balance also underpins Reflection’s business model. Researchers will be able to use the models freely, Laskin said, but revenue will come from large enterprises building products on top of Reflection’s models and from governments developing “sovereign AI” systems, meaning AI models developed and controlled by individual nations.

    “Once you get into that territory where you’re a large enterprise, by default you want an open model,” Laskin said. “You want something you will have ownership over. You can run it on your infrastructure. You can control its costs. You can customize it for various workloads. Because you’re paying some ungodly amount of money for AI, you want to be able to optimize it as much as much as possible, and really that’s the market that we’re serving.”

    Reflection hasn’t yet released its first model, which will be largely text-based, with multimodal capabilities in the future, according to Laskin. It will use the funds from this latest round to get the compute resources needed to train the new models, the first of which the company is aiming to release early next year.

    Investors in Reflection’s latest round include Nvidia, Disruptive, DST, 1789, B Capital, Lightspeed, GIC, Eric Yuan, Eric Schmidt, Citi, Sequoia, CRV, and others.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleAs Gaza Deal Nears, Palestinians and Israelis Cheer — and Worry
    Next Article Andreessen Horowitz denies report of India office, calls it ‘fake news’
    Arabian Media staff
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Thinking Machines Lab co-founder Andrew Tulloch heads to Meta

    October 11, 2025

    Kalshi hits $5B valuation days after rival Polymarket gets $2B NYSE backing at $8B

    October 10, 2025

    Kalshi hits $5B valuation days after rival Polymarket gets $2B NYSE backing at $8 Billion

    October 10, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    10 Trends From Year 2020 That Predict Business Apps Popularity

    January 20, 2021

    Shipping Lines Continue to Increase Fees, Firms Face More Difficulties

    January 15, 2021

    Qatar Airways Helps Bring Tens of Thousands of Seafarers

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to Updates

    Unlock the latest trends, insights, and expert advice in the world of startups and entrepreneurship with our exclusive newsletter.

    Welcome to Arabian Startup, your ultimate source for the latest trends, insights, and success stories in the world of startups and entrepreneurship.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Top Insights

    Top UK Stocks to Watch: Capita Shares Rise as it Unveils

    January 15, 2021
    8.5

    Digital Euro Might Suck Away 8% of Banks’ Deposits

    January 12, 2021

    Oil Gains on OPEC Outlook That U.S. Growth Will Slow

    January 11, 2021
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Unlock the latest trends, insights, and expert advice in the world of startups and entrepreneurship with our exclusive newsletter.

    @2025 copyright by Arabian Media Group
    • Home
    • About Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.