Venice AI, the privacy-centric artificial intelligence platform created by cryptocurrency pioneer Erik Voorhees, has successfully closed a $65 million Series A investment round. This landmark funding propels the startup to unicorn status with a $1 billion valuation, marking its inaugural external capital raise since its May 2024 debut.
https://twitter.com/ErikVoorhees/status/2072336114950545755?s=20
Dragonfly served as the lead investor in this financing round. Additional participants included Coinbase Ventures, North Island Ventures, F-Prime, Archetype, Liquid2 Ventures, and Morgan Creek.
The $65 million investment package granted backers an 8.98% ownership position in Venice AI. Investors also secured a vesting allocation of 1.5 million Venice (VVV) tokens. Additionally, they obtained warrants enabling them to purchase another 5 million VVV tokens during an eight-year window at approximately $66.5 million.
Both the token allocation and warrant instruments carry a one-year lock-up period, followed by a three-year vesting schedule.
Venice deliberately opted to sell company equity instead of directly offering its VVV tokens. Voorhees revealed that the company maintains a treasury of over 30 million VVV tokens, none of which have been liquidated despite the token’s impressive 700% price surge this year.
Venice AI markets itself as a privacy-respecting counterpart to mainstream platforms like [[LINK_START_0]]ChatGPT[[LINK_END_0]]. The service implements a zero-storage policy for user queries and applies encryption to all requests before directing them through external proxy servers.
When utilizing models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google, Venice masks users’ IP addresses and session information. Enhanced privacy features are accessible when using alternative models available through the platform.
The company reports a user community of 3.5 million and disclosed annualized revenue exceeding $70 million. According to Venice, the company achieved profitability during the first quarter of 2026.
This capital infusion arrives amid mounting concerns about AI privacy practices. A California class-action complaint targeted OpenAI for allegedly integrating Meta Pixel and Google Analytics into ChatGPT.com, purportedly transmitting user information to Meta and Google along with advertising cookies.
Earlier in the year, legal professionals cautioned that conversation histories from AI-powered legal advice tools could potentially be admitted as evidence in legal proceedings.
Voorhees outlined that the investment proceeds will primarily fund the construction of Venice’s inaugural data center, enabling the company to control its GPU infrastructure instead of relying on leased capacity.
Remaining funds will support customer base expansion, team recruitment, geographic market penetration, and strategic acquisitions of synergistic companies.
The company’s VVV token appreciated 6% following the funding announcement.
Venice operates a dual-token ecosystem that includes DIEM. Platform users can stake VVV tokens to generate DIEM, with each DIEM token providing $1 worth of API credits for platform usage.
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