Zilliz, the startup , behind the Milvus open source vector database for AI apps, raises $60M, relocates to SF which builds cloud-native software to process data for AI applications and unstructured data analytics, and is the creator of Milvus, the popular open source vector database for similarity searches raised $43 million to scale its business and prep the company to make a move into the U.S.
Zilliz, the startup, Nearly two years on, today Zilliz is announcing further funding of $60 million as it finally makes its move West, with a new HQ in San Francisco to capitalize on the growing demand for more efficient processing techniques for an ever-expanding trove of unstructured data getting commandeered to power AI applications. Led by Prosperity7 Ventures — a $1 billion venture fund created by Saudi oil giant Aramco (the name is a reference to the first commercial well to strike oil in the country) — the round also includes previous Chinese backers Temasek’s Pavilion Capital, Hillhouse Capital, 5Y Capital and Yunqi Capital. The company is not disclosing its valuation, but it’s worth pointing out that this latest injection is being described as an extension to that $43 million Series B rather than a new round. We’ll update this if we learn more. The total raised by the company is now $113 million. The capital and relocation speaks not just to a key moment for the company, but also for the area of machine learning and wider trends impacting Chinese-founded startups.
Zilliz, the startup, On the first of these, Zilliz’s breakout product, the open source Milvus, has boomed. The company said that downloads have now passed the 1 million mark, compared to 300,000 a year ago, with production users growing by 300% in the same period — however, it didn’t disclose its active user numbers. Customers include the likes of eBay, Tencent, Walmart, Ikea, Intuit and Compass. As we pointed out back in 2020, Milvus has not leaned heavily on advertising and marketing spend, instead choosing to leverage word of mouth on the places where developers like to hang out for ideas and inspiration to get itself noticed, such as GitHub and Reddit. That strategy has worked: “Stargazers” on GitHub are up 200% to more than 11,000 with the number of contributors doubling. (For a point of comparison, in 2020 it had been starred some 4,400 times.) The reason for the interest in Milvus — and subsequently Zilliz’s roadmap, which is based around creating further products, most recently a Zilliz Cloud-managed service that is now in private preview; and Towhee, another open source framework, this one for for vector data ETL — is because of the rising interest in vector databases as how they are being used in AI applications. Put simply, while data can be (and often is) processed via more traditional databases, the complexity of and structure of activities like anomaly detection, recommendation, rating and other AI-driven tasks lends itself more naturally and efficiently to vector databases designed to work with how AI data is represented. (Zilliz notes that its vector database “is both cloud native and capable of processing billion-scale vector data in milliseconds.”)
Zilliz the startup, “Zilliz’s journey to this point started with the creation of Milvus, an open-source vector database that eventually joined the LF AI & Data Foundation as a top-level project,” said Charles Xie, founder and CEO of Zilliz, in a statement. “Milvus has now become the world’s most popular open-source vector database with over a thousand end-users. We will continue to serve as a primary contributor and committer to Milvus and deliver on our promise to provide a fully managed vector database service on public cloud with the security, reliability, ease of use, and affordability that enterprises require.” There are others (competitors to Zilliz) like Pinecone and Weaviate also building solutions to address this. Pinecone raised money earlier this year and has some impressive names backing it, including Tiger Global and Menlo Ventures (for a point of comparison, PitchBook says Pinecone’s valuation is $168 million). Weaviate’s parent, SeMI Technologies out of The Netherlands, also raised this year, backed by the likes of NEA.
Source: This news is originally published by techcrunch