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28:52
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

From Early Computer Vision to the Commoditization of AI

Ramzi traces his tech roots back to co-founding the mobile photography platform EyeEm in 2010. To scale the curation and licensing of millions of photos, his team built early computer vision and machine learning models starting in 2013. While EyeEm once out-benchmarked tech giants like Google and Microsoft, Ramzi notes that the underlying technology has since become completely commoditized.

Redefining Creativity in the Age of Generative AI 

Ahead of his VDS panel on content creation, Ramzi shares his view that generative AI exposes human hubris regarding what makes us "special". Rather than simply enhancing or replacing human creativity, AI forces us to redefine it. He argues that while machines can mimic the technical execution of Beethoven or the Beatles, art forms like music and literature will remain human domains because they are fundamentally shared cultural experiences.

Why Traditional SaaS Is Dead (and What Excites Him Instead)

As an investor, Ramzi actively avoids traditional AI SaaS startups, believing that AI isn't just augmenting software: it is entirely replacing it. Instead, he is energized by the intersection of advanced computation and massive data sets being used to solve "impossible" problems, predicting that AI will help unlock the human brain, map the microbiome, and cure cancer within the next decade.

Investing Through Critical Systems and Human Obsession

At Work in Progress Capital, Ramzi backs engineers and scientists upgrading or resilient-proofing critical infrastructure like healthcare, energy, and defense. Because he invests at the earliest stages, his evaluation is highly qualitative. He looks for obsessive, passionate founders with a "chip on their shoulder" who have a deeply personal reason to survive the bleakest moments of building a company.

The Brutal Reality of Raising a Venture Capital Fund

Transitioning from a successful angel investor to a first-time solo GP managing a $10M fund has been an immense grind. Ramzi pulls back the curtain on the fundraising process, highlighting the challenges of securing institutional backers for a first-time fund. Driven by a desire to fix misalignment in VC, he uses his operational founder background to share industry economics openly with early-stage teams.

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