AI

DatologyAI is building tech to automatically curate AI training datasets

Comment

Abstract glowing grid and particles
Image Credits: piranka / Getty Images

Massive training datasets are the gateway to powerful AI models — but often, also those models’ downfall.

Biases emerge from prejudicial patterns concealed in large datasets, like pictures of mostly white CEOs in an image classification set. And big datasets can be messy, coming in formats incomprehensible to a model — formats containing a lot of noise and extraneous information.

In a recent Deloitte survey of companies adopting AI, 40% said data-related challenges — including thoroughly preparing and cleaning data — were among the top concerns hampering their AI initiatives. A separate poll of data scientists found that about 45% of scientists’ time is spent on data prep tasks, like “loading” and cleaning data.

Ari Morcos, who’s worked in the AI industry for nearly a decade, wants to abstract away many of the data prep processes around AI model training — and he’s founded a startup to do just that.

Morcos’ company, DatologyAI, builds tooling to automatically curate datasets like those used to train OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini and other like GenAI models. The platform can identify which data is most important depending on a model’s application (e.g. writing emails), Morcos claims, in addition to ways the dataset can be augmented with additional data and how it should be batched, or divided into more manageable chunks, during model training.

“Models are what they eat — models are a reflection of the data on which they’re trained,” Morcos told TechCrunch in an email interview. “However, not all data are created equal, and some training data are vastly more useful than others. Training models on the right data in the right way can have a dramatic impact on the resulting model.”

Morcos, who has a PhD in neuroscience from Harvard, spent two years at DeepMind applying neurology-inspired techniques to understand and improve AI models and five years at Meta’s AI lab uncovering some of the basic mechanisms underlying models’ functions. Along with his co-founders Matthew Leavitt and Bogdan Gaza, a former engineering lead at Amazon and then Twitter, Morcos launched DatologyAI with the goal of streamlining all forms of AI dataset curation.

As Morcos points out, the makeup of a training dataset impacts nearly every characteristic of a model trained on it — from the model’s performance on tasks to its size and the depth of its domain knowledge. More efficient datasets can cut down on training time and yield a smaller model, saving on compute costs, while datasets that include an especially diverse range of samples can handle esoteric requests more adeptly (generally speaking).

With interest in GenAI — which has a reputation for being expensive — at an all-time high, AI implementation costs are at the forefront of execs’ minds.

Many businesses are opting to fine-tune existing models (including open source models) for their purposes or opt for managed vendor services via APIs. But some — for governance and compliance reasons or otherwise — are building models on custom data from scratch, and spending tens of thousands to millions of dollars in compute in order to train and run them.

“Companies have collected treasure troves of data and want to train efficient, performant, specialized AI models that can maximize the benefit to their business,” Morcos said. “However, making effective use of these massive datasets is incredibly challenging and, if done incorrectly, leads to worse-performing models that take longer to train and [are larger] than necessary.”

DatologyAI can scale up to “petabytes” of data in any format — whether text, images, video, audio, tabular or more “exotic” modalities such as genomic and geospatial — and deploys to a customer’s infrastructure, either on-premises or via a virtual private cloud. This sets it apart from other data prep and curation tools like CleanLab, Lilac, Labelbox, YData and Galileo, Morcos claims, which tend to be more limited in the scope and types of data they can process.

DatologyAI’s also able to determine which “concepts” within a dataset — for example, concepts related to U.S. history in an educational chatbot training set — are more complex and therefore require higher-quality samples, as well as which data might cause a model to behave in unintended ways.

“Solving [these problems] requires automatically identifying concepts, their complexity and how much redundancy is actually necessary,” Morcos said. “Data augmentation, often using other models or synthetic data, is incredibly powerful, but must be done in a careful, targeted fashion.”

The question is, just how effective is DatologyAI’s technology? There’s reason to be skeptical. History has shown automated data curation doesn’t always work as intended, however sophisticated the method — or diverse the data.

LAION, a German nonprofit spearheading a number of GenAI projects, was forced to take down an algorithmically curated AI training dataset after it was discovered that the set contained images of child sexual abuse. Elsewhere, models such as ChatGPT, which are trained on a mix of datasets manually and automatically filtered for toxicity, have been shown to generate toxic content given specific prompts.

There’s no getting away from manual curation, some experts would argue — at least not if one hopes to achieve strong results with an AI model. The largest vendors today, from AWS to Google to OpenAI, rely on teams of human experts and (sometimes underpaid) annotators to shape and refine their training datasets.

Morcos insists DatologyAI’s tooling isn’t meant to replace manual curation altogether but rather offer suggestions that might not occur to data scientists, in particular suggestions tangential to the problem of trimming training dataset sizes. He’s somewhat of an authority — dataset trimming while preserving model performance was the focus of an academic paper Morcos co-authored with researchers from Stanford and the University of Tübingen in 2022, which earned a best paper award at the NeurIPS machine learning conference that year. 

“Identifying the right data at scale is extremely challenging and a frontier research problem,” Morcos said. “[Our approach] leads to models that train dramatically faster while simultaneously increasing performance on downstream tasks.”

DatologyAI’s tech was evidently promising enough to convince titans in tech and AI to invest in the startup’s seed round, including Google chief scientist Jeff Dean, Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun, Quora founder and OpenAI board member Adam D’Angelo and Geoffrey Hinton, who’s credited with developing some of the most important techniques in the heart of modern AI.

Other angel investors in DatologyAI’s $11.65 million seed, which was led by Amplify Partners with participation from Radical Ventures, Conviction Capital, Outset Capital and Quiet Capital, were Cohere co-founders Aidan Gomez and Ivan Zhang, Contextual AI founder Douwe Kiela, ex-Intel AI VP Naveen Rao and Jascha Sohl-Dickstein, one of the inventors of generative diffusion models. It’s an impressive list of AI luminaries to say the least — and suggests that there might just be something to Morcos’ claims.

“Models are only as good as the data on which they’re trained, but identifying the right training data among billions or trillions of examples is an incredibly challenging problem,” LeCun told TechCrunch in an emailed statement. “Ari and his team at DatologyAI are some of the world’s experts on this problem, and I believe the product they’re building to make high-quality data curation available to anyone who wants to train a model is vitally important to helping make AI work for everyone.”

San Francisco-based DatologyAI has 10 employees at present, inclusive of the co-founders, but plans to expand to around ~25 staffers by the end of the year if it reaches certain growth milestones.

I asked Morcos if the milestones were related to customer acquisition, but he declined to say — and, rather mysteriously, wouldn’t reveal the size of DatologyAI’s current client base.

More TechCrunch

OpenAI is removing one of the voices used by ChatGPT after users found that it sounded similar to Scarlett Johansson, the company announced on Monday. The voice, called Sky, is…

OpenAI is removing ChatGPT’s AI voice that sounds like Scarlett Johansson

Copilot, Microsoft’s brand of generative AI, will soon be far more deeply integrated into the Windows 11 experience.

Microsoft Build 2024: All the AI and hardware products Microsoft announced

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. For those who haven’t heard, the first crewed launch of Boeing’s Starliner capsule has been pushed back yet again to no earlier than…

TechCrunch Space: Star(side)liner

When I attended Automate in Chicago a few weeks back, multiple people thanked me for TechCrunch’s semi-regular robotics job report. It’s always edifying to get that feedback in person. While…

These 81 robotics companies are hiring

The top vehicle safety regulator in the U.S. has launched a formal probe into an April crash involving the all-electric VinFast VF8 SUV that claimed the lives of a family…

VinFast crash that killed family of four now under federal investigation

When putting a video portal in a public park in the middle of New York City, some inappropriate behavior will likely occur. The Portal, the vision of Lithuanian artist and…

NYC-Dublin real-time video portal reopens with some fixes to prevent inappropriate behavior

Longtime New York-based seed investor, Contour Venture Partners, is making progress on its latest flagship fund after lowering its target. The firm closed on $42 million, raised from 64 backers,…

Contour Venture Partners, an early investor in Datadog and Movable Ink, lowers the target for its fifth fund

Meta’s Oversight Board has now extended its scope to include the company’s newest platform, Instagram Threads, and has begun hearing cases from Threads.

Meta’s Oversight Board takes its first Threads case

The company says it’s refocusing and prioritizing fewer initiatives that will have the biggest impact on customers and add value to the business.

SeekOut, a recruiting startup last valued at $1.2 billion, lays off 30% of its workforce

The U.K.’s self-proclaimed “world-leading” regulations for self-driving cars are now official, after the Automated Vehicles (AV) Act received royal assent — the final rubber stamp any legislation must go through…

UK’s autonomous vehicle legislation becomes law, paving the way for first driverless cars by 2026

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code with short text prompts has evolved…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

SoLo Funds CEO Travis Holoway: “Regulators seem driven by press releases when they should be motivated by true consumer protection and empowering equitable solutions.”

Fintech lender SoLo Funds is being sued again by the government over its lending practices

Hard tech startups generate a lot of buzz, but there’s a growing cohort of companies building digital tools squarely focused on making hard tech development faster, more efficient and —…

Rollup wants to be the hardware engineer’s workhorse

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 is not just about groundbreaking innovations, insightful panels, and visionary speakers — it’s also about listening to YOU, the audience, and what you feel is top of…

Disrupt Audience Choice vote closes Friday

Google says the new SDK would help Google expand on its core mission of connecting the right audience to the right content at the right time.

Google is launching a new Android feature to drive users back into their installed apps

Jolla has taken the official wraps off the first version of its personal server-based AI assistant in the making. The reborn startup is building a privacy-focused AI device — aka…

Jolla debuts privacy-focused AI hardware

The ChatGPT mobile app’s net revenue first jumped 22% on the day of the GPT-4o launch and continued to grow in the following days.

ChatGPT’s mobile app revenue saw its biggest spike yet following GPT-4o launch

Dating app maker Bumble has acquired Geneva, an online platform built around forming real-world groups and clubs. The company said that the deal is designed to help it expand its…

Bumble buys community building app Geneva to expand further into friendships

CyberArk — one of the army of larger security companies founded out of Israel — is acquiring Venafi, a specialist in machine identity, for $1.54 billion. 

CyberArk snaps up Venafi for $1.54B to ramp up in machine-to-machine security

Founder-market fit is one of the most crucial factors in a startup’s success, and operators (someone involved in the day-to-day operations of a startup) turned founders have an almost unfair advantage…

OpenseedVC, which backs operators in Africa and Europe starting their companies, reaches first close of $10M fund

A Singapore High Court has effectively approved Pine Labs’ request to shift its operations to India.

Pine Labs gets Singapore court approval to shift base to India

The AI Safety Institute, a U.K. body that aims to assess and address risks in AI platforms, has said it will open a second location in San Francisco. 

UK opens office in San Francisco to tackle AI risk

Companies are always looking for an edge, and searching for ways to encourage their employees to innovate. One way to do that is by running an internal hackathon around a…

Why companies are turning to internal hackathons

Featured Article

I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Women in tech still face a shocking level of mistreatment at work. Melinda French Gates is one of the few working to change that.

1 day ago
I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s  broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Blue Origin has successfully completed its NS-25 mission, resuming crewed flights for the first time in nearly two years. The mission brought six tourist crew members to the edge of…

Blue Origin successfully launches its first crewed mission since 2022

Creative Artists Agency (CAA), one of the top entertainment and sports talent agencies, is hoping to be at the forefront of AI protection services for celebrities in Hollywood. With many…

Hollywood agency CAA aims to help stars manage their own AI likenesses

Expedia says Rathi Murthy and Sreenivas Rachamadugu, respectively its CTO and senior vice president of core services product & engineering, are no longer employed at the travel booking company. In…

Expedia says two execs dismissed after ‘violation of company policy’

Welcome back to TechCrunch’s Week in Review. This week had two major events from OpenAI and Google. OpenAI’s spring update event saw the reveal of its new model, GPT-4o, which…

OpenAI and Google lay out their competing AI visions

When Jeffrey Wang posted to X asking if anyone wanted to go in on an order of fancy-but-affordable office nap pods, he didn’t expect the post to go viral.

With AI startups booming, nap pods and Silicon Valley hustle culture are back

OpenAI’s Superalignment team, responsible for developing ways to govern and steer “superintelligent” AI systems, was promised 20% of the company’s compute resources, according to a person from that team. But…

OpenAI created a team to control ‘superintelligent’ AI — then let it wither, source says