
Venice AI Hits $1 Billion Valuation on Privacy-First Pitch
Founder Erik Voorhees says AI firms should shield user conversations, as his private ChatGPT rival reaches a $1 billion valuation.

Clara Schmidt
Germany Editor · Berlin
Venice, an artificial intelligence platform built around user privacy, has reached a valuation of $1 billion, according to reporting by Decrypt. The milestone arrives as founder Erik Voorhees pushes a broader argument: that the companies building conversational AI tools have a duty to protect what users type into them.
A Privacy-First Bet on Conversational AI
Venice positions itself as an alternative to mainstream chatbots, with Voorhees making the case that AI providers should safeguard the content of user conversations rather than treat that data as a resource to be collected and retained. As Decrypt reported, the company's rise to a $1 billion valuation signals investor appetite for services that promise stronger guarantees around how personal and sensitive prompts are handled.
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