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Britain’s got AI talent but that’s not enough

The ambitions may be homegrown yet the funds still come from abroad
British tech company Wayve, which develops software for autonomous vehicles, has attracted investment from US groups such as Nividia, SoftBank and Microsoft

It’s the kind of crazily ambitious investment that seemingly only happens in Silicon Valley near the top of a hype cycle: a pre-product, lossmaking artificial intelligence start-up raises $1bn from SoftBank, Microsoft and Nvidia to fund a dizzying ambition for global domination. In fact, this deal was sealed in London last week when Wayve, which develops software for autonomous vehicles, announced Europe’s largest AI start-up fundraising.

If any British technology company is to match chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s desire to create a homegrown Microsoft over the next decade worth more than $1tn, then Wayve is probably as good a bet as any. As a global pioneer in the white-hot field of embodied AI — interacting and learning from the environment — Wayve could sell the software for millions of self-driving cars if it spends its money wisely and executes its plans impeccably. “Embodied AI is going to be a sector that produces trillion-dollar companies,” says Alex Kendall, Wayve’s co-founder and chief executive. “And certainly our ambition is to be one of those.”

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