Venice AI, the decentralized artificial intelligence platform founded by crypto pioneer Erik Voorhees, has raised $65 million in a Series A funding round led by Paradigm and Dragonfly, propelling the company to a $1 billion valuation just two years after its founding.
The startup, which offers access to more than 200 AI models with end-to-end encryption and no data storage on its own systems, has already turned profitable with annualized run-rate revenue exceeding $70 million, Voorhees told TechCrunch in an exclusive interview. Coinbase Ventures and North Island Ventures also participated in the round, the company's first external fundraise.
"We're optimizing for freedom and actually respecting users as adults, which is, I think, rare these days," Voorhees said. The founder, an early bitcoin advocate who previously launched cryptocurrency exchange ShapeShift and bitcoin gambling site Satoshi Dice, has long argued that privacy-preserving technology should be a neutral tool rather than a gatekept service.
Venice AI serves more than 3 million active users and processes an average of 1.7 million API calls per day, with 850,000 unique visitors to its website monthly. The platform hosts uncensored, open-source models on its own data centers while routing queries to closed-source models from OpenAI and Anthropic through an external proxy. All user input is encrypted client-side, with no data retained on Venice's infrastructure — a design that sets it apart from mainstream AI providers that store and train on user conversations.
The company's growth has been fueled by two crypto tokens: VVV, launched in January, and DIEM, added in August. Users can stake VVV to mint DIEM, which generates $1 worth of AI credits per day on the platform. About 8% of Venice's users pay with crypto, Voorhees said, though he credited the tokens with driving adoption alongside the platform's improving feature parity with ChatGPT.
The competitive landscape for privacy-focused AI
Venice AI's valuation milestone comes as the broader AI industry grapples with a tension between user privacy and model safety. Major AI developers including OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have implemented increasingly strict content safeguards in response to concerns over mental health impacts, harassment, and disinformation — restrictions that have pushed some users toward uncensored alternatives.
Venice positions itself as the anti-thesis of this trend, offering unrestricted access to models that can generate text, images, audio, and video without content filters. The company works on some open models' system prompts to encourage more open responses but does not add its own restrictions. This approach has resonated with users who object to what they see as corporate censorship of AI tools.
The privacy-first AI market remains nascent but is attracting significant capital. Venice's $65 million raise and unicorn valuation signal that investors see a viable business model in serving users who prioritize data sovereignty over the convenience of mainstream AI platforms. The global data center infrastructure market, valued at $297 billion in 2025, is projected to reach $752 billion by 2034, driven in part by AI workloads, according to industry data.
What the funding means for Venice's infrastructure plans
Venice AI plans to use the fresh capital to buy graphics processing units and build its own data centers, moving away from leasing GPU capacity to improve gross margins. The company currently relies on third-party cloud providers for compute, a cost structure that eats into its profitability despite the $70 million revenue run rate.
The shift to owned infrastructure mirrors a broader trend among AI companies seeking to control their supply chains amid GPU shortages and rising cloud costs. Nvidia's H100 and upcoming B200 chips remain in high demand, with lead times stretching months for new orders. By securing its own hardware, Venice can reduce dependency on cloud providers and potentially offer lower inference costs to users.
Voorhees drew a parallel between Venice's philosophy and bitcoin's design principles. "This is the same principle that you have in Bitcoin, where Bitcoin, as a neutral protocol, works the same way for all people," he said. "I think it's actually quite dangerous from a safety perspective, for the world to enter this next phase and have everyone be constantly watched."
The company's unicorn status also reflects growing investor appetite for crypto-AI crossover projects. Paradigm, the lead investor in this round, has been among the most active venture firms backing decentralized infrastructure plays, while Dragonfly's participation underscores the overlap between crypto-native capital and privacy-focused technology. The funding could boost valuations for similar projects in the decentralized compute and AI network space, where tokens tied to GPU-sharing protocols and privacy layers have seen increased trading activity.
Venice AI's challenge will be sustaining growth as it scales infrastructure and competes with well-capitalized incumbents. OpenAI, valued at $157 billion in its latest funding round, and Anthropic, at $18.4 billion, have vastly larger resources. But Venice's focus on privacy and uncensored access gives it a differentiated position in a market where regulatory scrutiny of AI safety is only intensifying.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.