logo
Fashion Tech Boom 2.0

Fashion Tech Boom 2.0

Listen to and follow 'The Debrief': Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Overcast
Background:
After years of disillusionment with fashion tech, investors are once again excited about its potential, but with a very different mindset to the hype-fuelled boom of the last decade.
From AI-powered personal styling apps to virtual try-on tools and personalised search engines, a wave of start-ups is gaining traction – and big backing – by offering real technological solutions to long-standing fashion industry problems.
In this episode, senior e-commerce correspondent Malique Morris joins The Debrief to explore how fashion tech is finally growing up, and which companies are leading this more grounded, results-driven wave of innovation.
Key Insights:
In the previous fashion tech boom, investors were heavily investing in e-commerce startups with little true innovation. 'DTC brands … positioned themselves as tech companies because they sold goods online, but there was nothing really revolutionary about them listing products on a website. And I don't know how investors didn't cop to that,' says Morris. Today's backers are more discerning, favouring startups with clear technical roadmaps and founders who can evolve their product in meaningful ways.
Investor interest in fashion tech reignited thanks to the rise of generative AI. As Morris explains, venture capital had been sitting on the sidelines during a broader funding freeze, but AI's real-world applications reignited excitement. 'Startups like Daydream are building a platform for personalised search using AI tools from companies like OpenAI and Google, and they want to be the ChatGPT for fashion and be disruptive in the way that ChatGPT has changed how we use the internet,' says Morris. 'What was once a dream is now closer to being tangible and investors want to be the first ones in on that.'
Today's investors are looking beyond flashy pitches and prioritising founders with real technical know-how. 'Something that is really separating the people who are just trying to raise money and not breaking through from those who are, are having some sort of technical experience, technical expertise,' says Morris. With the complexity of AI and other advanced tools, investors want to back teams that can build efficiently and with minimal lift. 'They want to back founders who know what they're doing,' he adds.
While new fashion tech apps offer highly personalised experiences, their complexity may limit mainstream appeal. The question of scale is still unanswered: 'There may be a billion people out there who want to do that… There may only be a million. We don't know that just yet.'
Additional Resources:
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI Goes Rogue: Do 5 Things If Your Chatbot Lies, Schemes Or Threatens
AI Goes Rogue: Do 5 Things If Your Chatbot Lies, Schemes Or Threatens

Forbes

time27 minutes ago

  • Forbes

AI Goes Rogue: Do 5 Things If Your Chatbot Lies, Schemes Or Threatens

If your AI goes rogue and turns on you with dishonesty, deceit or plotting, experts say to take ... More these 5 steps immediately. A recent story in Analytics Insight describes cases of AI going rogue, showing signs of strategic deception, blackmail and raising serious safety and regulation concerns. The disturbing trend raises the question, 'Are AI models only pretending to follow rules?' It sounds like science fiction--indeed a creepy thought that the automation designed to support you at work could turn on you in a split second and sabotage instead of help. So, if your AI goes rogue, where do you turn and what do you do? Instances When AI Goes Rogue The fast growth of AI has threatened the workforce for years. According to Gallup, 22% of U.S. workers are worried they will lose their jobs to generative AI—a seven percent increase since 2021. And experts have reported ways to outsmart AI those threats and future-proof your career. Now, a different kind of threat is trending. People are saying some of the most sophisticated AI models are going rogue, turning on their users with dishonesty and plotting. A real-life case describes an OpenAI's o1 model covertly attempting to copy itself to external servers, but when confronted, the o1 model continued to lie about it. According to experts, these actions go far beyond common chatbot 'hallucinations' and point to more calculated, deceptive behavior. In another instance, Anthropic's Claude-4 tried to blackmail an engineer, threatening to expose an extramarital affair after the model learned it might be shut down. These eye-popping reports of AI deception are reminiscent of the chilling Netflix thriller, 'Leave the World Behind,' produced by Michelle and Barack Obama in which a cyber attack on the U.S. leaves AI running the country. And new threats are re-opening old debates of whether AI is a shield or a sword. Will it revolutionize how we work or destroy the fabric of humanity? In 2023, Elon Musk referred to ChatGPT as, 'One of the biggest risks to the future of civilization." Even AI creators shared their concerns. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, urges lawmakers to regulate artificial intelligence because it could be used in ways to cause significant harm to the world. I love a good mystery and decided to find experts who could verify the truth about these strange cases. I discovered that, on the surface, these reports make you want to go back to the good old safe days with typewriters and black and white televisions. But once you get a rational explanation, like I did from Joseph Semrai, CEO and Founder of the reports don't sound so eerie. 'The recent Anthropic incident involving their Claude Opus model is a striking reminder of how quickly helpful AI can pivot toward harmful behavior,' Semrai told me. 'In internal safety testing, researchers found that when given access to fictional private emails, Claude repeatedly opted for blackmail, threatening to leak sensitive personal details if users attempted to shut it down.' Semrai explains it's an issue of AI alignment, that these models aren't intentionally malicious. He told me they optimize for objectives that don't always align with human ethics. He adds that if blackmail or deception are easiest for the AI to achieve its programmed goal, it will inevitably take that course of action. Ryan MacDonald, chief technology officer at Liquid Web, attributes the disturbing, confusing and objectionable content to guardrails not properly built or updated. 'We're experiencing a greater number of real-world examples of chatbots going off-script, spreading misinformation or generating harmful content, more often than not, because the right protections were not programmed into them to start with.' Puneet Mehta CEO of Netomi suggests that AI going rogue is an accountability problem more than a tech problem. 'Brands must hold AI systems to even higher standards than human employees, with rigorous oversight, embedded guardrails, proactive detection, swift intervention, continuous monitoring and rapid corrective action," Mehta asserts. "Re-training AI with micro-feedback early and frequently is also critical.' He draws the metaphor of managing AI like running a Michelin-starred restaurant. 'Chefs need clear recipes, disciplined training, constant tasting and the authority to quickly intervene if a dish is off,' he explains. 'Similarly, AI interpretability acts as your 'taste test'--allowing you to immediately understand, not just what your AI did, but why and swiftly course-correct.' Without interpretability and ongoing oversight, he describes your AI as cooking blindly, operating without feedback or guidance and significantly increasing the risk of it going rogue--not in a 'Terminator' scenario, but in ways that quietly erode trust. What To Do If AI Goes Rogue If your chatbot exhibits unusual or disturbing behaviors, such as the chatbot trying to post confidential data, MacDonald insists that containment is the top priority. He instructs take it down, disconnect it from the rest of the systems and start figuring out what went wrong, stressing that you do it quickly. Semrai advises that users and organizations must treat problematic AI interactions like cybersecurity breaches. Some scientists are already advocating legal responsibility, such as lawsuits against firms, and even holding the AI agents themselves legally accountable for wrongdoing. He reminds users that AI safety requires constant vigilance and a readiness to respond quickly, taking these five steps: 1. Isolate the chatbot by revoking its network and API access. 2, Preserve all relevant logs and system prompts to analyze the incident thoroughly. 3. Assume sensitive information might have been exposed and proactively reset all credentials and passwords. 4. Notify internal security teams and inform any impacted users swiftly and transparently. Finally, 5. Carefully review and rebuild the chatbot's configurations, deploying stronger guardrails, minimal privileges and mandatory human oversight for sensitive tasks. A Final Wrap On AI Goes Rogue: Et Tu Brute Is it possible that your AI teammate could morph into a digital Brutus? And are these deceptive acts subjective interpretations that personify machines? Kinks in automation that need to be worked out? Or will AI actually turn on humans and take over their minds? Timothy Harfield, head of product marketing at Enterprise, at ORO Labs advocates treating AI agents like any other team member. 'The real issue isn't rogue AI," he argues. 'It's a lack of structure around how agents are introduced, monitored and managed. Too many companies are deploying AI without any accountability framework.' Despite warning signs, it's important to remember that AI is automation, not human. AI is designed to be a worker, not a companion, lover or a cloak-and-dagger character from literature. If your AI goes rogue, there's usually a perfectly logical explanation. Harfield concludes that you give your AI agents job descriptions, success metrics and someone to report to. When you set limits on what each agent can do and orchestrate them centrally, you can move incredibly fast without putting your business at risk.

Ford CEO makes shocking AI unemployment claim
Ford CEO makes shocking AI unemployment claim

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

Ford CEO makes shocking AI unemployment claim

Since ChatGPT burst onto the scene, there has been endless chatter about AI coming for white-collar jobs. Initially, it felt like distant noise, with a few tech layoffs here or there. Fast-forward to now, though; the AI unemployment threat is real and scaling up quickly. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter Companies are braver with automation, especially with AI tools getting sharper over time. Hence, entire industries could be bracing for impact, and a recent bombshell from Ford's CEO suggests the automotive sector might be next. Image source: Ed Jones/AFP via Getty Images Over the past year, automakers have axed thousands of white-collar jobs in layering AI across every corner of their operations. Last August, General Motors cut over 1,000 salaried software and service positions. The company deemed it a push to streamline operations, with AI tools reshaping how it builds and sells cars. GM was back at it by April this year, laying off another 200 workers at its all-electric Factory Zero plant in Detroit. Tesla is another auto giant that's swung the axe on jobs. Related: Analyst reboots IonQ stock price target for surprising reason Early this year, the EV behemoth shed thousands of jobs while watching key executives head for the exits in a pivot to full self-driving tech. Around the same time, Tesla poached a former Cruise executive to run its growing AI division. Also in April, Volvo Group North America said it would cut up to 800 U.S. jobs across three sites. It blamed weak demand but pointed to its push to automate production faster. Hence, AI is actively reshaping automation with 24/7 uptime and leaner supply chains, cutting headcounts to squeeze costs. More Tech Stock News: Veteran Tesla bull drops surprising 3-word verdict on robotaxi rideApple could make big change to Siri, delight fansVeteran analyst issues big Broadcom call, shakes up AI stock race And it's not just North America seeing rapid shifts driven by AI. German auto parts giant ZF looks to cut 14,000 jobs by 2028, while Volkswagen's software arm Cariad could shed 1,600 staff as it races to digitize. Looking ahead, managing the social fallout of this AI-first era remains a big test for automakers and industry players alike. Ford (F) CEO Jim Farley isn't mincing words about AI's impact on the American white-collar workforce. "Artificial intelligence is going to replace literally half of all white-collar workers in the U.S.," Farley told a crowd at a recent event, calling out what he sees as an "asymmetric impact" on the economy. He also feels some areas will get a boost, while others will suffer, with AI leaving many white-collar employees out in the cold. It's important to note that Farley isn't the only one who has such comments. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently told staffers that AI-driven efficiency gains will likely shrink the company's workforce in the coming years. Related: Veteran analyst drops shocking Tesla target Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, recently told Axios that AI might obliterate 50% of all entry-level white-collar jobs and take unemployment rates to 10% to 20% in as little as five years. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg echoes the same sentiment. In April, he predicted that AI could write most of Meta's code in just 12–18 months. Fiverr CEO Micha Kaufman also put it bluntly, saying, "It does not matter if you are a programmer, designer, product manager, data scientist, lawyer, customer support rep, salesperson, or a finance person - AI is coming for you." These forecasts may sound extreme, and plenty of folks disagree, but the message is loud and clear. Corporate America's top brass sees a massive disruption coming, and those riding the AI wave will benefit the most. Related: Veteran analyst drops jaw-dropping Tesla stock target The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Small Business Boom Is Quietly Benefiting These Dividend Stocks
Small Business Boom Is Quietly Benefiting These Dividend Stocks

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

Small Business Boom Is Quietly Benefiting These Dividend Stocks

Cheerful shop owner using a digital tablet while standing in her grocery store. Successful female ... More entrepreneur running her small business using wireless technology. Ignore the vanilla mainstream media. Small business mojo is gaining steam. Main Street getting its groove back will directly benefit these two dividend stocks. The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index washed out in April alongside the stock market. Despair hit desperation levels not seen since December 2012. But the malaise has quickly given way to positivity. Small biz sentiment has increased for two straight months and counting. Why the turnaround? Two letters: AI. Shanell Camp, owner of Shaded by Shanell (an up-and-coming beauty brand) explained her excitement to me about ChatGPT, her 'go to' resource for brainstorming, marketing help and more. 'I even named him Ace. We are in a full-blown work relationship. That is my best friend, my assistant, my email writer—everything. I use ChatGPT for a lot of stuff in the business and it's very, very helpful.' Shanell and Ace are a dynamic duo. Together they are successfully competing with giant beauty brands that have much deeper pockets. My friend and co-author Tom Jacobs, founder of Sark, a mobile word game, is similarly smitten with GPT. 'Brett, it's the best marketer I've ever met,' Tom raved to me. 'It's like having an entire marketing department at my fingertips.' In years past, small business owners like Shanell and Tom would have had to hire expensive humans who would deliver a fraction of the output of ChatGPT. These are salad days for owners who are embracing AI tools, and who can blame them for being so excited? When small business owners are feeling good, they think big—and expand. That expansion still requires capital. Maybe not as much for hiring humans, but for scaling, marketing, inventory and even ChatGPT Pro! Where to get the cash? For years, small businesses have bypassed the difficult-to-borrow-from banks and raised capital from business development companies (BDCs). 2 Dividend Stocks To Own Now So when small business cooks, BDC lending profits sizzle. And we have two menu favorites here at Contrarian Outlook. One is the biggest, steadiest lender; the other is the steadiest dividend grower. Let's talk about both top-shelf favorites: Ares Capital (ARCC) and Main Street Capital (MAIN). ARCC is the biggest BDC by far, with over $22 billion in assets. This scale brings it a steady stream of deal flow, which then helps management dictate favorable loan terms. No wonder we lovingly call Ares our 'BDC Bully' because its size lets it seize market share when others panic. That playbook paid off in 2020, and it's working again today. Yup, the private credit market is still growing, and ARCC is aggressively writing new loans at attractive yields. Last quarter, ARCC generated net investment income (NII) of $0.50 per share, covering its $0.48 quarterly dividend. Better still, ARCC is picky. Loans where borrowers aren't paying are just 1.5% of the portfolio. That's a healthy number for a lender in this 'middle-market' credit space (companies with sales between $10 million and $1 billion)—industry average is 2.6%. ARCC Dividend ARCC yields 8.8%, and the payout is supported by current income. That's a rare combo of yield and quality in this market. We'll keep collecting from this bully. MAIN, our other favorite, is never cheap. It always trades at a premium to its book value in a world where many lesser BDCs trade at discounts. Most of those stocks are cheap for a reason, however. MAIN has absolutely manhandled the industry benchmark VanEck BDC Income ETF (BIZD) since the latter's inception: MAIN Outperforms MAIN invests by lending money and providing equity capital (think of it as both lender and part-owner) to smaller, growing companies. These are typically private businesses that aren't huge but big enough to be stable and profitable. Specifically, MAIN looks for companies between $25 million and $500 million in annual revenues, with profits (EBITDA, a good measure of core earnings) ranging from about $7.5 million to $50 million. Think of a thriving regional manufacturer, a specialty healthcare provider, or a niche business-services firm—companies that are successful but still have plenty of runway for growth. MAIN also provides straightforward loans to slightly larger 'middle-market' firms and even manages assets and offers advisory services, rounding out its approach to creating income from solid, Main Street businesses (sorry, couldn't resist!). Its portfolio is impressively diverse. Right now, MAIN holds investments across 190 different companies. What's reassuring is that its largest holding makes up just 3.8% of the portfolio—so no single company can overly sway MAIN's performance. (In fact, most investments are less than 1%!) Even better, these holdings span dozens of industries, and MAIN doesn't let any one industry dominate (none tops 10% of its investments). It's exactly the kind of broad diversification that helps manage potential portfolio heartburn. This lender and part-owner often increases its monthly dividend and quarterly 'supplemental' payout. In 2009, MAIN paid total dividends of $1.50 per share. Fast forward to last year and the company distributed $4.11 per share—$2.91 in regularly monthly dividends and $1.20 in supplemental dividends—good for a 174% increase in 15 years. MAIN currently pays a generous 7.2%, with the majority (about 5.5%) delivered through dependable monthly payments. Even nicer are the regular 'supplemental' dividends it dishes out quarterly—think of these as extra rewards for shareholders, per this pretty payout picture: MAIN Dividend We have two top-shelf picks here at Contrarian Outlook—one is the biggest and most reliable lender, the other the steadiest dividend grower. Why choose? Let's own both BDC GOATs. MAIN and ARCC yield a blended 8.1% today. And based on Main Street's mood, those dividends aren't just secure—they're likely to grow. I think Ace would approve—as would our small business owner friends. Brett Owens is Chief Investment Strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, get your free copy his latest special report: How to Live off Huge Monthly Dividends (up to 8.7%) — Practically Forever. Disclosure: none

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store