
OpenAI
Founded Year
2015Stage
Unattributed VC - II | AliveTotal Raised
$64.1BValuation
$0000Last Raised
$40B | 3 mos agoRevenue
$0000Mosaic Score The Mosaic Score is an algorithm that measures the overall financial health and market potential of private companies.
-8 points in the past 30 days
About OpenAI
OpenAI offers artificial intelligence (AI) research and deployment that focuses on ensuring that AI benefits all of humanity. Its main offerings include developing AI technologies with a commitment to safety, alignment with human values, and broad societal benefits. Its products and services are designed to address global challenges and promote the equitable distribution of AI advantages. It was founded in 2015 and is based in San Francisco, California.
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Research containing OpenAI
Get data-driven expert analysis from the CB Insights Intelligence Unit.
CB Insights Intelligence Analysts have mentioned OpenAI in 75 CB Insights research briefs, most recently on Jul 10, 2025.

Jul 10, 2025 report
State of Venture Q2’25 Report

May 8, 2025 report
State of Insurtech Q1’25 Report
May 1, 2025 report
State of AI Q1’25 ReportExpert Collections containing OpenAI
Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.
OpenAI is included in 8 Expert Collections, including Unicorns- Billion Dollar Startups.
Unicorns- Billion Dollar Startups
1,276 items
AI 100 (All Winners 2018-2025)
200 items
Generative AI 50
50 items
CB Insights' list of the 50 most promising private generative AI companies across the globe.
Generative AI
2,332 items
Companies working on generative AI applications and infrastructure.
AI 100 (2024)
100 items
ITC Vegas 2024 - Exhibitors and Sponsors
699 items
Created 9/9/24. Updated 10.22.24. Company list source: ITC Vegas. Check ITC Vegas' website for final list: https://events.clarionevents.com/InsureTech2024/Public/EventMap.aspx?shMode=E&ID=84001
OpenAI Patents
OpenAI has filed 27 patents.
The 3 most popular patent topics include:
- computational linguistics
- natural language processing
- machine learning

Application Date | Grant Date | Title | Related Topics | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
3/15/2024 | 12/10/2024 | Natural language processing, Computational linguistics, Artificial intelligence, Artificial intelligence applications, Chatterbots | Grant |
Application Date | 3/15/2024 |
---|---|
Grant Date | 12/10/2024 |
Title | |
Related Topics | Natural language processing, Computational linguistics, Artificial intelligence, Artificial intelligence applications, Chatterbots |
Status | Grant |
Latest OpenAI News
Jul 11, 2025
At the heart of this bitter legal wrangling is a big idea: we shouldn’t need to stare at computer or phone screens or talk to a box like Amazon’s Alexa to interact with our future AI assistants in a natural way. Share this: By MATT O’BRIEN A secretive competition to pioneer a new way of communicating with artificial intelligence chatbots is getting a messy public airing as OpenAI fights a trademark dispute over its stealth hardware collaboration with legendary iPhone designer Jony Ive. Related Articles In the latest twist, tech startup iyO Inc., which already sued Ive and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman for trademark infringement, is now suing one of its own former employees for allegedly leaking a confidential drawing of iyO’s unreleased product. At the heart of this bitter legal wrangling is a big idea: we shouldn’t need to stare at computer or phone screens or talk to a box like Amazon’s Alexa to interact with our future AI assistants in a natural way. And whoever comes up with this new AI interface could profit immensely from it. OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT, started to outline its own vision in May by buying io Products, a product and engineering company co-founded by Ive, in a deal valued at nearly $6.5 billion. Soon after, iyO sued for trademark infringement for the similar sounding name and because of the firms’ past interactions. U.S. District Judge Trina Thompson ruled last month that iyO has a strong enough case to proceed to a hearing this fall. Until then, she ordered Altman, Ive and OpenAI to refrain from using the io brand, leading them to take down the web page and all mentions of the venture. A second lawsuit from iyO filed this week in San Francisco Superior Court accuses a former iyO executive, Dan Sargent, of breach of contract and misappropriation of trade secrets over his meetings with another io co-founder, Tang Yew Tan, a close Ive ally who led design of the Apple Watch. Sargent left iyO in December and now works for Apple. He and Apple didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. “This is not an action we take lightly,” said iyO CEO Jason Rugolo in a statement Thursday. “Our primary goal here is not to target a former employee, whom we considered a friend, but to hold accountable those whom we believe preyed on him from a position of power.” Rugolo told The Associated Press last month that he thought he was on the right path in 2022 when he pitched his ideas and showed off his prototypes to firms tied to Altman and Ive. Rugolo later publicly expanded on his earbud-like “audio computer” product in a TED Talk last year. What he didn’t know was that, by 2023, Ive and Altman had begun quietly collaborating on their own AI hardware initiative. “I’m happy to compete on product, but calling it the same name, that part is just amazing to me. And it was shocking,” Rugolo said in an interview. The new venture was revealed publicly in a May video announcement, and to Rugolo about two months earlier after he had emailed Altman with an investment pitch. “thanks but im working on something competitive so will (respectfully) pass!” Altman wrote to Rugolo in March, adding in parentheses that it was called io. Altman has dismissed iyO’s lawsuit on social media as a “silly, disappointing and wrong” move from a “quite persistent” Rugolo. Other executives in court documents characterized the product Rugolo was pitching as a failed one that didn’t work properly in a demo. Altman said in a written declaration that he and Ive chose the name two years ago in reference to the concept of “input/output” that describes how a computer receives and transmits information. Neither io nor iyO was first to play with the phrasing — Google’s flagship annual technology showcase is called I/O — but Altman said he and Ive acquired the io.com domain name in August 2023. The idea was “to create products that go beyond traditional products and interfaces,” Altman said. “We want to create new ways for people to input their requests and new ways for them to receive helpful outputs, powered by AI.” A number of startups have already tried, and mostly failed, to build gadgetry for AI interactions. The startup Humane developed a wearable pin that you could talk to, but the product was poorly reviewed and the startup discontinued sales after HP acquired its assets earlier this year. Altman has suggested that io’s version could be different. He said in a now-removed video that he’s already trying a prototype at home that Ive gave him, calling it “the coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen.” Altman and Ive still haven’t said is what exactly it is. The court case, however, has forced their team to disclose what it’s not. “Its design is not yet finalized, but it is not an in-ear device, nor a wearable device,” said Tan in a court declaration that sought to distance the venture from iyO’s product. It was that same declaration that led iyO to sue Sargent this week. Tan revealed in the filing that he had talked to a “now former” iyO engineer who was looking for a job because of his frustration with “iyO’s slow pace, unscalable product plans, and continued acceptance of preorders without a sellable product.” Those conversations with the unnamed employee led Tan to conclude “that iyO was basically offering ‘vaporware’ — advertising for a product that does not actually exist or function as advertised, and my instinct was to avoid meeting with iyO myself and to discourage others from doing so.” IyO said its investigators recently reached out to Sargent and confirmed he was the one who met with Tan. FILE – Jason Rugolo, founder and CEO of iyO, wears the iyO One audio computer in his ears while being interviewed at the company’s office in Redwood City, Calif., Tuesday, June 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File) Rugolo told the AP he feels duped after he first pitched his idea to Altman in 2022 through the Apollo Projects, a venture capital firm started by Altman and his brothers. Rugolo said he demonstrated his products and the firm politely declined, with the explanation that they don’t do consumer hardware investments. That same year, Rugolo also pitched the same idea to Ive through LoveFrom, the San Francisco design firm started by Ive after his 27-year career at Apple . Ive’s firm also declined. “I feel kind of stupid now,” Rugolo added. “Because we talked for so long. I met with them so many times and demo’d all their people — at least seven people there. Met with them in person a bunch of times, talking about all our ideas.” The Associated Press and OpenAI have a licensing and technology agreement that allows OpenAI access to part of AP’s text archives. Originally Published:
OpenAI Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
When was OpenAI founded?
OpenAI was founded in 2015.
Where is OpenAI's headquarters?
OpenAI's headquarters is located at 3180 18th Street, San Francisco.
What is OpenAI's latest funding round?
OpenAI's latest funding round is Unattributed VC - II.
How much did OpenAI raise?
OpenAI raised a total of $64.1B.
Who are the investors of OpenAI?
Investors of OpenAI include Microsoft, Thrive Capital, Coatue, Altimeter Capital, SoftBank and 41 more.
Who are OpenAI's competitors?
Competitors of OpenAI include xAI, Anthropic, ElevenLabs, AI Redefined, Labs and 7 more.
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