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23.02.2026 − 01.03.2026
The Next Web
Ana-Maria Stanciuc @ The Next Web 1 place · 02/23/2026 05:43 EDT

The EU’s strategic rebalancing of research partnerships with China

In 2026, one of Europe’s most ambitious scientific ventures, Horizon Europe, a seven-year, roughly €93 billion framework dedicated to research and innovation, underwent a quiet but significant transformation.  What had once been an open invitation to researchers across the globe now carries a more guarded tenor.  In critical areas such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors, quantum […] This story continues at The Next Web Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web 3 place · 05/08/2024 11:41 EDT

Dutch VC Capital Mills invests in German no-code startup Innoloft

No-code startup Innoloft has raised €2mn in a new funding round led by Dutch VC firm Capital Mills. This marks the firm’s first investment into a German company. Innoloft’s no-code platform enables businesses to build web applications without any programming knowledge. Founded in 2019, the startup now counts over 70,000 end-users and includes customers such as Deutsche Telekom, Aachen University, and German state governments. With the new funding, Innoloft plans... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/08/2024 10:26 EDT

Meet the leader of LockBit, the ‘most active ransomware gang ever’

Cybercrime hunters have unmasked the alleged leader of LockBit, a hacker network dubbed the “most active ransomware group ever.” LockBit gained global notoriety for holding victims’ data to ransom and ransomware-as-a-service, whereby it licenses malware to other hackers. According to Europol, the gang was behind the world’s most deployed ransomware in 2022 — causing billions of euros worth of damage. Among the high-profile victims are US aerospace giant Boeing, Britain’s... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web 3 place · 05/08/2024 09:04 EDT

Neuron-sized brain implant could help blind people see again

A team of researchers have built a vision implant with tiny electrodes the size of a neuron, seeking to help blind people see again. The development of vision implants first emerged in the 1990s. The technology targets patients suffering from damage to the eye, but whose visual cortex— the brain’s visual centre — is active and able to receive signals. But despite the solution’s potential, existing methods are limited by... Read more

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The Next Web
Linnea Ahlgren @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/08/2024 08:00 EDT

Swiss startup unveils post-quantum cryptography library for devs

Terra Quantum has today revealed its TQ42 Cryptography library — an open-source suite of quantum-resistant algorithms designed to help developers and businesses protect data from current and future cybersecurity threats. The new cryptography library provides developers with post-quantum algorithms and security and key management functions. They can be used across a range of applications, including mobile, web, IoT, and cloud. The library is now available through the GitHub repository. According... Read more

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The Next Web
Thomas Macaulay @ The Next Web · 05/08/2024 07:01 EDT

French AI toasts $200M for Holistic as Sonio sale shows risks of success

France’s budding AI scene has received another boost from a big investment in the startup Holistic. Amid the celebrations, however, the sale of medtech firm Sonio has added a warning about the dangers of success. The Holistic funding was revealed by Bloomberg on Tuesday. The Paris-based firm has reportedly raised $200mn (€186mn) in a round that values the company at $370mn (€344mn). Holistic has big plans for the cash. According... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/07/2024 12:16 EDT

UK fintech raises £800M for AI that determines how much money you can borrow

An AI scanning your bank transaction data entails a level of invasiveness that I find difficult to accept — let alone embrace for my own transaction information. But the technology could bring merits, at least in the lending world. Enter Abound. The London-based startup has just raised £800mn for its lending platform that uses AI to determine loan amounts. Dubbed Render, Abound’s AI analyses customers’ full bank transaction data (from... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web · 05/07/2024 10:41 EDT

Bottoms up: This German beer is made from recycled wastewater

Reuse Brew is a classic German lager with a twist — it’s made from recycled wastewater.  The beer is the result of a tie-up between the south German city of Weissenburg, American water tech company Xylem, and the Technical University of Munich (TUM). Specifically, TUM’s Brewery and Beverage Technology department (why didn’t I study there?!).  While the idea of a sewage brew might be hard to swallow, Xylem ensures us... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web · 05/07/2024 08:55 EDT

German chip giant lowers 2024 forecast as electronics slowdown bites

Infineon, one of the biggest chip makers in Europe, has lowered its revenue outlook for the year, citing “weak” demand from its major target markets. The German company is now expecting a revenue of €15.1bn, plus or minus €400mn. That’s down from the previous forecast of €16bn, plus or minus €500mn. In the second quarter of 2024, Infineon saw a 2% drop in revenue compared to the previous quarter, generating... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web 3 place · 05/07/2024 07:02 EDT

UK’s Wayve raises $1B in Europe’s largest ever AI funding round

Wayve, a London-based startup working on AI systems for autonomous vehicles, has raised $1bn. The colossal funding round marks the largest single investment in a European AI startup. Japanese conglomerate SoftBank led the funding round alongside tech giants Nvidia and Microsoft. Wayve did not disclose its valuation following the investment.  Founded in Cambridge in 2017, Wayve is developing so-called embodied AI systems for self-driving cars. Unlike pure software AI like... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web · 05/07/2024 02:00 EDT

Swiss startup to advance collaborative robots with GenAI humanoid hand

The power of generative AI has further ignited the race for advanced humanoid robots, promising more capable machines that can learn and deal with unknown environments and challenges. Amid increasing competition across the globe, Switzerland-based mimic is also throwing its hat in the ring. The startup has raised a pre-seed round of $2.5mn (€2.3mn) to bring the first GenAI-powered collaborative robot to market. A spinoff from ETH Zurich, mimic was... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web · 05/06/2024 12:27 EDT

Tilburg’s Mr. Winston raises €600K for its hospitality POS system

Tilburg-based Mr. Winston has raised €600,000 to further develop its hospitality POS system and expand into more markets. Founded in 2015, the startup provides a cloud-based POS solution that can work on all devices and operating systems such as iOS and Android. The POS also features additional modules, including reservations, QR ordering, and kitchen screens. “This flexibility towards the user is lacking in our competition,” Koen Lavrijssen, founder and CTO... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web · 05/06/2024 11:11 EDT

Swedish startup wins EU funding to print organic indoor solar panels

The EU has granted €3.3mn to a consortium led by Swedish startup Epishine. The group’s mission is to boost the development of organic solar panels.    In this case, organic refers to solar panels that are carbon-based. Instead of using silicon to conduct electricity, these solar panels utilise organic molecules. Organic solar cells are very lightweight, cheap, semi-transparent, printable, and flexible. They can also convert indoor light into electricity. That can... Read more

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The Next Web
Danijel Višević @ The Next Web · 05/06/2024 10:27 EDT

Humanity faces two existential crises — the climate crisis and AI. Can one help solve the other?

As I write this, two contrasting regulations on the development of artificial intelligence — namely generative AI — are making their way through the European and British parliaments. The British approach is very simple — looking to ensure AI companies fit into existing laws governing technology companies.  In contrast, the EU approach, as White & Case analysis describes, is an entirely new piece of legislation, and is risk-based — looking... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/06/2024 07:51 EDT

This startup is using protein powder to beef up carbon capture

A British startup has devised a way to speed-up enhanced rock weathering using protein powder in a potential step forward for the budding carbon capture industry.  Enhanced rock weathering (ERW) involves spreading silicate rock dust on fields to capture carbon. When it rains, the dust reacts with the CO2 in the droplets, permanently storing it in the rocks as carbonate (think chalk or baking soda). This relatively simple technology has... Read more

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The Next Web
Ioanna Lykiardopoulou @ The Next Web 1 place · 05/03/2024 11:23 EDT

This week in Dutch tech

Friday is here and so is TNW’s weekly round-up of tech news from our glorious home country. This week saw advances in medtech, quantum breakthroughs, and calls to further boost the Dutch chip industry. Our highlights have you covered, but we’d also love to hear your thoughts on the local ecosystem. Drop us a line if you want to showcase your startup, share a digital tip, or just tell us... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web 1 place · 05/03/2024 10:38 EDT

Uber rival Bolt secures €220M in prep for IPO

Estonian mobility startup Bolt has secured a €220mn credit facility as it plans to go public next year.   This type of financing is a more flexible loan option, which allows a business to withdraw and repay funds as needed, on an ongoing basis. Kind of like a credit card for companies.  The credit facility  provides Bolt  “with additional flexibility as we work towards being IPO-ready,” CEO and founder Markus Villig... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/03/2024 06:50 EDT

Deeptech VC raises €300M in push for ‘semiconductor supremacy’

Flemish venture capital firm Imec.xpand has raised €300mn to invest in deeptech startups.    The VC is a spinoff from Leuven-based Imec, one of the world’s largest microelectronics research institutions.  The new fund targets  AI, semiconductors, nanotechnology, photonics, and quantum computing. It will also invest in startups working on new ways to diagnose and treat medical conditions.    To date, Imec.xpand has invested in 23 companies that have so far raised a... Read more

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The Next Web
The Conversation @ The Next Web · 05/02/2024 14:00 EDT

AI-powered ‘deep medicine’ could transform healthcare in the NHS

Today’s NHS faces severe time constraints, with the risk of short consultations and concerns about the risk of misdiagnosis or delayed care. These challenges are compounded by limited resources and overstretched staff that results in protracted patient wait times and generic treatment strategies. Staff can operate with a surface level view of patient data, relying on basic medical histories and recent test results. This lack of comprehensive data interferes with... Read more

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The Next Web
Andrea Hak @ The Next Web 1 place · 05/02/2024 09:03 EDT

Europe is falling behind in the race to develop space-based solar power

When the EU approved the European Green Deal in 2020, the bloc unveiled a plan to lead the clean energy transition. Yet it has since faced growing competition from both China — which has quickly and quietly buried Europe’s solar panel industry and is now taking aim at its EV market — and the US, which under the Biden administration took an about-face on sustainability with the introduction of the... Read more

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The Next Web
Siôn Geschwindt @ The Next Web 2 place · 05/02/2024 05:55 EDT

This tech investor will pay Ukrainian farmers to trap carbon in their soil

Lithuanian climate investment firm HeavyFinance has added over 700,000 football pitches-worth of farmland in Ukraine to its soil carbon credit programme. Modern agriculture has taken its toll on soils. Centuries of plowing, cutting, and overgrazing has made land less fertile. This has also released billions of tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere.   HeavyFinance pays farmers to put some of this carbon back into the ground.  Specifically, the company issues loans... Read more

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