AI Startup Raises Millions to Digest Intel for Spies, Financiers and Walmart
AI Startup Raises Millions to Digest Intel for Spies, Financiers and Walmart · Fortune

Everything the Internet has had to say about cryptocurrency is at my immediate disposal—no Googling necessary.

Sean Gourley, the founder and CEO of Primer, a 2.5-year-old, previously media-shy startup that uses artificial intelligence algorithms to parse vast quantities of data and spit out pithy, navigable digests, is demonstrating his company’s software for me in a midtown Manhattan office near the United Nations’ headquarters. Displayed on-screen is a cascade of October headlines pertaining to Bitcoin—”Russia to regulate Bitcoin market,” “Wu-Tang Clan’s Ghostface Killah cofounded a cryptocurrency venture,” “Goldman Sachs CEO hasn’t made up his mind on Bitcoin,” and on and on.

The deluge is no match for Gourley’s synopsizing program. The tool condenses this seemingly endless list into a single page, concisely summarizing all of the important details into a general overview. The document features charts, maps, timelines, and plenty of hyperlinks for the inquisitive to drill down deeper into any particular facet of the news.

Primer’s tool spins up what looks like a well-researched Wikipedia entry on any topic: Bitcoin, terrorism, oil, organic beef, regional liquor sales—you name it. Structured and unstructured data goes in, proper analyses come out.

No more sifting through pages of Google search results to locate original information; everything is right there.

“We built a program that can read, find insights and generate human readable output,” Gourley says. “And we do that at a speed well beyond what just humans can do.”

Priming the pump

Primer is banking on businesses desiring, yet not being able to afford, their own sprawling armies of intelligence analysts to make sense of an inbound flood of digital data. So Primer offers to take the load off humans by doing the digging, the compiling, and the summarizing for them with its natural language processing tech.

Investors see potential. Primer said Tuesday it has raised $14.7 million in two previously undisclosed rounds of venture capital funding led by Data Collective, a VC firm co-managed by Zachary Bogue, husband of former Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer. Other investors include Lux Capital, Amplify Partners, and In-Q-Tel, the investment arm of the U.S. intelligence community.

The fundraising comes just as the quantity of data generated by humans and their technologies is set to explode. By 2025, this figure is expected to ramp up to a trillion gigabytes, ten times what was created in 2016, according to researcher IDC. It’s a good time to be in business, in other words.