AlphaGo Creator David Silver Raises $1.1B Seed Round for RL-Only AI Startup Ineffable Intelligence
From AlphaZero to a Universal Superlearner
David Silver, the DeepMind researcher who co-created AlphaZero, which mastered chess and Go without studying a single human game, has launched a new AI company. Ineffable Intelligence emerged from stealth on April 27, 2026, with a $1.1 billion seed round led by Sequoia Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners, with participation from Index Ventures, Google, and Nvidia. The round values the company at $5.1 billion and is Europe's largest seed round ever recorded.
The UK government's Sovereign AI venture fund and the British Business Bank also participated, underscoring the UK's ambitions as a global AI research hub.
The Superlearner Vision
Ineffable's thesis is that reinforcement learning, AI learning by trial and error rather than absorbing human-generated data, is the path to artificial superintelligence. The company's mission is to build a superlearner that discovers all knowledge from its own experience. Silver has described the ambition as a scientific breakthrough of comparable magnitude to Darwin.
Profits to Charity
Silver has pledged to donate profits from Ineffable to high-impact charitable causes. Former DeepMind colleagues are expected to join the executive team.
Related Articles
This matters because Xiaomi just put a frontier-scale model family behind permissive terms instead of a closed API gate. The MiMo-V2.5 release promises a 1M-token context window, MIT licensing for commercial use and fine-tuning, and a Pro variant Xiaomi says leads open models on GDPVal-AA and ClawEval.
This matters because the next bottleneck in agent coding is human attention, not raw model speed. OpenAI says Symphony lifted landed pull requests by 500% on some teams after engineers hit a practical ceiling of roughly three to five concurrent Codex sessions.
LocalLLaMA did not treat this like routine subreddit drama. The thread exploded because a popular uncensored-model maker’s claimed private method suddenly looked less like secret sauce and more like stripped-attribution reuse of Heretic.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!