OpenAI invests in Sam Altman’s brain-computer interface startup Merge Labs


Just when I thought about it Circular deals It couldn’t be more complicated, as OpenAI has invested in CEO Sam Altman’s brain-computer interface startup Integration of laboratories.

Merge Labs, which describes itself as a “research lab” dedicated to “connecting biological and artificial intelligence to maximize human potential,” emerged from stealth on Thursday with an undisclosed seed round. A source familiar with the matter confirmed Previous reports OpenAI wrote the largest single check in Merge Labs’ $250 million seed round at an $850 million valuation.

“Our individual experience of the world arises from billions of active neurons,” a statement from Merge Labs said. “If we can interact with these neurons on a large scale, we can restore lost capabilities, support healthier brain states, deepen our connections with each other, and expand what we can imagine and create alongside advanced artificial intelligence.”

Merge Labs said it intends to reach these breakthroughs non-invasively by developing “entirely new technologies that communicate with neurons using molecules rather than electrodes” to “transmit and receive information using deep-range modalities such as ultrasound.”

This step goes deeper Altman’s competition with Elon Musk, The startup Neuralink is also developing computer interface chips that allow people with severe paralysis to control devices with their thoughts. Neuralink currently requires an invasive surgical procedure for the implant, in which a surgical robot removes a small piece of the skull and inserts very fine polar threads into the brain to read nerve signals. The company last filed a 650 million dollars E string in A $9 billion validation in June 2025.

While there are undoubtedly medical use cases for BCIs, Merge Labs seems more focused on using the technology to fulfill a Silicon Valley fantasy of combining human biology with artificial intelligence to give us superhuman abilities.

“Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are an important new frontier,” OpenAI wrote in an article Blog post. “They open up new ways to communicate, learn, and interact with technology. Human-to-human interfaces will create a natural, human-centered way for anyone to seamlessly interact with AI. That’s why OpenAI is participating in Merge Labs’ seed round.”

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Aside from Altman, other co-founders include Alex Plania and Sandro Herbig, respectively, CEO and head of product and engineering at Tools for Humanity, another Altman-backed company (and creator of Universal Eye Scanning Orbs); Tyson Afflalo and Sumner Norman, co-founders of implantable neurotechnology company Forest Neurotech; and Michael Shapiro, a researcher at the California Institute of Technology.

As part of the deal, OpenAI will work with Merge Labs on scientific basis models and other pioneering tools to “accelerate progress.” In its blog, OpenAI noted that not only will AI help accelerate R&D in bioengineering, neuroscience, and device engineering, but interfaces will also benefit from AI operating systems that “can interpret intentions, adapt to individuals, and operate reliably with limited, noisy signals.”

In other words, Merge Labs can act as a remote control for OpenAI. This leads to the circular nature of the deal: if Merge Labs is successful, it could drive more users to OpenAI, justifying OpenAI’s investment in the company. He also increases the value of Altman’s startup by using resources from a company he runs.

OpenAI also works with Jony Ive’s startup ioAnd he is acquired Last year, to produce a piece of non-screen-based AI hardware. recently Unconfirmed leaks Indicates that the device may be an earphone.

OpenAI invests primarily through the OpenAI Startup Fund, which has invested in several other startups associated with Altman, including Red Queen Bio, Rain AI, and Harvey. OpenAI has also entered into commercial agreements with startups that Altman personally owns or heads, including nuclear fusion startup Helion Energy and nuclear fission company Oklo.

Altman has been dreaming about so-called “fusion” — the idea of ​​humans and machines merging — since at least 2017, when he published the book Blog post He expected this to happen somewhere between 2025 and 2075. He also speculated that fusion could take many forms, including connecting electrons to our brains or becoming “really close friends with a chatbot.”

He said the merger is “our best scenario” for humanity to survive against artificial superintelligence, which he described as a separate species in conflict with humans.

“Although the consolidation process has already begun, it is only going to get weirder,” Altman wrote. “We will be the first species ever to engineer our own descendants. I believe we can either be the biological bearer of digital intelligence and then fade into the branch of an evolutionary tree, or we can figure out what successful integration looks like.”

TechCrunch has reached out to OpenAI and Merge Labs for more information.

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