The AI Worries Keeping Investors Up at Night
The Information
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AI Business
It’s no surprise that if you bring hundreds of venture capitalists and limited partners together in 2026, most will have bought into AI - literally. So it was interesting to hear what investors gathered in Santa Monica, Calif., last week for March Capital’s annual The Montgomery Summit thought were the AI boom’s weak links. Take Matt McIlwain, a managing director at Madrona. On a panel, he said that the Seattle-based venture capital firm has seen AI-driven application businesses grow at a faster clip than other kinds of companies in the past two decades.