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Apple acquires Israeli audio AI startup Q.ai

Apple said it has acquired Q.ai, an Israeli startup focused on artificial intelligence for audio applications. Apple did not disclose financial terms, but a source familiar with the deal said the transaction valued Q.ai at around $1.6 billion. The startup was backed by several major venture capital firms.

Apple said Q.ai has developed machine learning techniques that help devices understand whispered speech and improve audio quality in difficult environments. The company did not specify how the technology will be integrated, but the acquisition aligns with Apple’s broader push to enhance AI-driven experiences across its hardware products, including wearables.

Q.ai has also filed patents related to detecting subtle facial skin micromovements to interpret speech, identity, and certain physiological indicators. Around 100 Q.ai employees, including its leadership team, will join Apple as part of the deal. Apple executives said the acquisition strengthens its long-term capabilities in imaging, audio, and machine learning.

Fintech Airwallex Buys South Korea’s Paynuri in Asia Expansion

Australia-founded fintech Airwallex has acquired South Korea’s Paynuri, securing key local licences that will allow it to operate directly in the country as it accelerates expansion across Asia.

Airwallex said the deal grants it Paynuri’s Payment Gateway and Prepaid Electronic Payment Instrument licences, along with a Foreign Exchange Business registration. Financial terms were not disclosed. Co-founder and president Lucy Liu said the acquisition removes reliance on third-party intermediaries and enables direct operations in South Korea.

The company plans to launch global business accounts and payment acquiring services in South Korea in 2026, followed later by spend-management products. Airwallex also aims to build a local team of about 20 staff by the end of 2026 across sales, compliance, and product support.

The move follows a December funding round that valued Airwallex at $8 billion, around 30% higher than its previous valuation. General manager for Asia-Pacific Arnold Chan said South Korea’s fast-growing ecommerce and entertainment sectors offer strong opportunities for Korean businesses expanding overseas.

Airwallex reported $1.2 billion in annualised revenue and $266 billion in annualised transaction volume in December, underscoring its rapid global growth.

Meta to buy Chinese-founded startup Manus to boost advanced AI

Meta said on Monday it will acquire Chinese-founded artificial intelligence startup Manus, stepping up efforts to integrate more advanced AI capabilities across its platforms. Financial terms were not disclosed, but a source with direct knowledge of the matter said the deal values the Singapore-based firm at between $2 billion and $3 billion.

Manus did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The startup drew widespread attention earlier this year after releasing what it described as the world’s first general AI agent—software designed to make decisions and execute tasks autonomously with far less prompting than conventional chatbots such as ChatGPT or DeepSeek. The launch sparked viral discussion on X and led some commentators to label Manus “China’s next DeepSeek,” with praise from Chinese state television.

Months later, Manus moved its headquarters from China to Singapore, joining a broader wave of Chinese-founded tech firms seeking to reduce exposure to rising U.S.-China tensions. The company’s products are not available in China. Manus has claimed its AI agent outperforms OpenAI’s DeepResearch and maintains a strategic partnership with Alibaba to collaborate on AI models.

Meta said it will operate and commercialize the Manus service and integrate it into both consumer and business offerings, including Meta AI. The acquisition reflects intensifying competition among large technology companies racing to secure differentiated AI capabilities through deals and talent hires.

Earlier this year, Meta invested in Scale AI in a transaction valuing the startup at $29 billion and bringing in its CEO, Alexandr Wang. Manus, backed by parent company Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology, raised $75 million this year at a valuation of about $500 million, according to the source, confirming prior media reports. The funding round was led by Benchmark, with investors including HSG, ZhenFund and Tencent Holdings, PitchBook data showed.