Google Meet Restores Service After U.S. Outage

Google said its video-conferencing platform, Google Meet, is back online after a disruption earlier on Monday that left thousands of U.S. users unable to access sessions.

The outage caused slow interface loading and blocked users from joining meetings, according to Google. The company traced the problem to a recent change in content edge cache, which it has since rolled back.

At the peak, tracking site Downdetector logged nearly 16,400 incident reports, though the actual number of affected users could have been higher. By 2:43 p.m. ET, reports had dropped to around 600 cases.

Google confirmed the issue was resolved and apologized for the inconvenience, saying normal service has resumed.

Databricks Hits $100 Billion Valuation with $1 Billion Raise, Projects $4 Billion Revenue

Databricks, the San Francisco-based data analytics and AI firm, announced on Monday that it has closed a $1 billion Series K funding round at a $100 billion valuation, cementing its position as one of the world’s most valuable private companies.

The round was co-led by Andreessen Horowitz, Insight Partners, MGX, Thrive Capital, and WCM Investment Management. The fresh capital will fuel Databricks’ AI strategy, supporting new product launches, acquisitions, and advanced research.

The company revealed it is now on track to hit $4 billion in annualized revenue, with AI-related products contributing $1 billion. Its customer base has grown to around 15,000 clients, including Shell and Rivian, while its Lakebase data warehouse has already reached tens of millions in annualized revenue just months after launch.

CEO Ali Ghodsi said Databricks will remain cash-flow positive, keeping the option of an IPO open but without a fixed timeline. The company is also investing in Agent Bricks, its new AI platform for building autonomous systems, and recently acquired Tecton, a machine learning startup.

With net revenue retention above 140%, over 650 customers spending more than $1 million annually, and positive free cash flow, Databricks is positioning itself as a leader in the AI and big data race—and a likely candidate for one of the most anticipated IPOs in the sector.

ElevenLabs Staff to Sell Shares at $6.6 Billion Valuation

ElevenLabs, the fast-growing voice cloning AI startup, is allowing employees to sell shares at a $6.6 billion valuation, double its January 2024 value of $3.3 billion, according to Bloomberg News. The move highlights the ongoing competition among AI firms to retain top talent by offering stock liquidity.

The tender offer will enable staff who have worked at the company for at least a year to sell up to $100 million worth of shares, giving them an opportunity to cash out while allowing investors to boost stakes. Sequoia Capital and Iconiq are leading the deal, joined by Andreessen Horowitz and other backers.

Founded by Piotr Dabkowski (ex-Google) and Mati Staniszewski (ex-Palantir), ElevenLabs has seen explosive growth. Its headcount jumped from 77 employees to 331 in a year, while annualized recurring revenue surged from $100 million in October 2024 to $200 million in mid-2025. The company aims to hit $300 million by year-end.

The valuation leap puts ElevenLabs among the most valuable AI startups in the world. It comes as OpenAI also explores an employee stock sale that could value it at $500 billion, underscoring how AI’s growth is reshaping private markets.