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  • Now Deel is accusing Rippling of spying by ‘impersonating’ a customer

    Now Deel is accusing Rippling of spying by ‘impersonating’ a customer

    HR tech startup Deel filed an amended complaint on Tuesday in its ongoing legal battle against its archrival Rippling that offers surprising new details about its own corporate spying allegations.

    Rippling sued Deel in March after a Rippling employee testified in an Irish court that he was spying on his employer for the rival in an affidavit that reads like a Hollywood movie. Rippling’s lawsuit alleges misappropriation of trade secrets, tortious interference, unfair competition, and more, largely based on the spying allegations.

    Deel has since countersued, attempting to get the suit dismissed for technical reasons, but also making its own allegations, like that Rippling has also been spying. This amended complaint offers more details on what Deel means by that.

    Specifically, it alleges that one of Rippling’s employees, who holds the job title of Competitive Intelligence, “spent six months impersonating a legitimate Deel customer to gain unauthorized access to Deel’s systems to meticulously analyze, record, and copy Deel’s global products and the way Deel does business for Rippling’s own benefit and use.” 

    The lawsuit is also full of insults hurled at Rippling’s CEO, Parker Conrad, and mentions his troubles at his previous company, Zenefits. At times, the complaint ventures into psychoanalysis territory. “To understand Conrad is to understand Rippling,” the suit claims.  

    It then goes on to speculate that Rippling has targeted Deel because Conrad is angry at Zenefits’ VC backer, Andreessen Horowitz: “Sadly, it is now apparent that Conrad has made it his life’s goal to exact misguided and petty revenge on those connected with Andreessen, including Deel, in which Andreessen owns a 20% share.”

    And the complaint alleges that “Rippling has planted false and misleading claims about Deel in the press and with regulators across the country.” 

    This appears to stem from 2023, when U.S. Senator Adam Schiff posted a public letter asking the U.S. Department of Labor to look into how Deel was classifying workers. This after Business Insider published an investigation on the matter. Deel denied wrongdoing at the time and said a discussion with Schiff put the matter to bed.

    The amended complaint also provides at least one financial tidbit; Deel says it has been profitable for years and is generating over $1 billion in annual revenue.

    A spokesperson for Rippling says that the company is looking into the specific allegations of how the employee gathered product intelligence as described in the complaint. The spokesperson tells us that “Rippling is unwavering in our commitment to fair competition and the highest ethical standards. We expect full compliance as described clearly in our written policies.”

    The spokesperson also alleges that the revised complaint “backtracks” from some of the assertions in the original, including removing wording that implied Rippling had somehow obtained access to Deel’s board-level information.

    While the lawsuit is an entertaining read (here’s a link to it), about the level of a typical Bravo network reality TV show, Deel appears to be attempting to make a tit-for-tat case about corporate spying. But the two sets of allegations are not about the same thing. 

    Rippling is accusing Deel of paying an employee to gather information from Rippling’s internal network. The employee, who confessed to spying, has testified that he gave Deel information that included sales leads, product roadmaps, customer accounts, names of superstar employees, and whatever else was asked for.

    Deel is accusing Rippling of unfairly learning about its product and features from the product itself as well as the information it gives to its customers. Competitors have been buying each other’s products as a way to keep tabs, one-up, and sell against each other since the beginning of time. So it will be interesting to see how the courts handle Deel’s lawsuit — if they rule that such tactics can go too far.

    In the meantime, Rippling’s alleged catching of the corporate spy — which involved a trap, a smashed phone, and a honeypot — has already slipped into the tech industry’s cultural lexicon. 

    When Y Combinator grad Cotool launched an agentic security platform last month that, among other things, sets up honeypots, its ad was a spoof on how Rippling’s corporate spy said he was caught.

  • Windsurf says Anthropic is limiting its direct access to Claude AI models

    Windsurf says Anthropic is limiting its direct access to Claude AI models

    Windsurf, the popular vibe coding startup that’s reportedly being acquired by OpenAI, says Anthropic significantly reduced its first-party access to its Claude 3.7 Sonnet and Claude 3.5 Sonnet AI models.

    Windsurf CEO Varun Mohan said in a post on X Tuesday that Anthropic gave Windsurf little notice for this change, and the startup now has to find other third-party compute providers to run several of Anthropic’s most popular AI models on its platform.

    “We have been very clear to Anthropic that this is not our desire – we wanted to pay them for the full capacity,” said Mohan on X. “We are disappointed by this decision and short notice.”

    In a blog post, Windsurf said it has some capacity with third-party inference providers, but not enough, so this change may create short-term availability issues for Windsurf users trying to access Claude.

    With less than five days of notice, Anthropic decided to cut off nearly all of our first-party capacity to all Claude 3.x models. Given the short notice, we may see some short-term Claude 3.x model availability issues as we have very quickly ramped up capacity on other inference…

    — Varun Mohan (@_mohansolo) June 3, 2025

    The decision comes just a few weeks after Anthropic seemed to pass over Windsurf during the launch of Claude 4, the company’s new family of models, which offer industry leading performance on software engineering tasks.

    On launch day, Windsurf said it did not receive direct access from Anthropic to run Claude 4 on its platform, and still hasn’t. This forced the company to rely on a workaround that’s more expensive and complicated for developers to access Claude 4. Meanwhile, other popular AI coding tools — including Anysphere’s Cursor, Cognition’s Devin, and Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot — seemed to have direct access to Claude 4 models at launch.

    The AI-assisted coding sector, also know as vibe coding, has heated up in recent months. OpenAI reportedly closed on a deal to acquire Windsurf in April. At the same time, Anthropic — whose AI models are a favorite among developers — has invested more in its own AI-coding applications. In February, Anthropic launched its own AI coding application, Claude Code, and in May, the startup held its first Code with Claude developer conference.

    “We’re prioritizing capacity for sustainable partnerships that allow us to effectively serve the broader developer community,” said Anthropic spokesperson Steve Mnich in an email to TechCrunch on Tuesday, noting that it’s still possible to access Claude 4 on Windsurf via an API key. “Developers can also access Claude through our direct API integration, our partner ecosystem, and other development tools.”

    Windsurf has grown quickly this year, reaching $100 million ARR in April, in an attempt to catch up with more popular AI coding tools such as Cursor and GitHub Copilot. However, Windsurf’s limited access to Anthropic’s models may be stunting its growth.

    Several Windsurf users who spoke with TechCrunch were frustrated by the lack of direct access to Anthropic’s best AI coding models.

    Ronald Mannak, a startup founder that specializes in Apple’s programming language, Swift, told TechCrunch that Claude 4 represented a significant jump in capabilities for his workloads. While Mannak has been a Windsurf customer since late 2024, he’s switched to using Cursor in recent weeks so that he can vibe code more easily with Claude 4.

    As a short-term solution to support Claude 4, Windsurf allows users to connect their Anthropic API keys to their Windsurf accounts. However, developers have noted that this “bring your own key” solution is more expensive and complicated than if Windsurf provided the models itself.

    When it comes to vibe coders, optionality is the name of the game. Every few months, OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic release new AI models that seem to outperform the industry on coding tasks. Because of that, it benefits vibe coding startups to support AI models from all the leading developers.

    Windsurf spokesperson Payal Patel tells TechCrunch via email that the company has always believed in providing optionality for users. In this case, it seems Anthropic has made that a bit more challenging.

    Maxwell Zeff is a senior reporter at TechCrunch specializing in AI and emerging technologies. Previously with Gizmodo, Bloomberg, and MSNBC, Zeff has covered the rise of AI and the Silicon Valley Bank crisis. He is based in San Francisco. When not reporting, he can be found hiking, biking, and exploring the Bay Area’s food scene.

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  • The OpenAI board drama is reportedly turning into a movie

    The OpenAI board drama is reportedly turning into a movie

    Image Credits:JASON REDMOND/AFP / Getty Images

    A film that will portray the chaotic time at OpenAI, when co-founder and CEO Sam Altman was fired and rehired within a span of just five days, is reportedly in the works. 

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the movie is titled “Artificial,” and it’s in development at Amazon MGM Studios.

    While details aren’t finalized, sources told THR that Luca Guadagnino, known for “Call Me by Your Name” and “Challengers,” is in talks to direct. The studio is considering Andrew Garfield to portray Altman, Monica Barbaro (“A Complete Unknown) as former CTO Mira Murati, and Yura Borisov (“Anora”) for the part of Ilya Sutskever, a co-founder who urged for Altman’s removal. 

    Additionally, “Saturday Night Live” writer Simon Rich reportedly wrote the screenplay, suggesting the film will likely incorporate comedic aspects. An OpenAI comedy movie feels fitting since the realm of AI has its own ridiculousness, and the events that took place two years ago were nothing short of absurd. 

    In November 2023, Sam Altman was dismissed from the AI company and resigned from both his position as CEO and his role on the board. The rationale was that the board no longer trusted Altman to lead effectively. However, just five days later, after numerous discussions and negotiations, an agreement was reached, resulting in Altman’s reinstatement. 

    No matter who is cast in this movie, it’ll be fascinating to see how “Artificial” portrays the drama and what the overall reception will be among general audiences, especially considering the increasing prevalence of AI tools like ChatGPT.

    Lauren covers media, streaming, apps and platforms at TechCrunch.

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  • Waaree Energies shares gain 7% after subsidiary wins international order worth 6 million

    Waaree Energies shares gain 7% after subsidiary wins international order worth $176 million

    Shares of Waaree Energies Ltd. gained nearly 7% on Thursday May 29, after the company said its wholly-owned subsidiary Waaree Solar Americas received an order from $176 million for the supply of 586 MW solar modules.

    It said it received the order from a renowned customer who is a developer and owner-operator of utility scale solar and energy storage projects across the United States.

    The supply of 586 MW solar modules is expected is scheduled to begin from the financial year 2027.

    Last week, the company’s board approved the acquisition of Kamath Transformers Pvt. Ltd. for ₹293 crore.

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    The acquisition is part of Waaree Energies’ business expansion activity and will be completed in the ongoing fiscal year. The company will acquire 100% shareholding in Kamath Transformers on a cash consideration basis.

    Waaree Energies said Kamath Transformers is a well-established and progressive company in transformer manufacturing. It was incorporated on May 23, 1996. The company reported a turnover of ₹25.73 crore in financial year 2022, ₹54.41 crore in financial year 2023 and ₹122.68 crore in financial year 2024.

    Additionally, the company’s board also approved the acquisition of newly-incorporated non-operating company Green New Delhi Forever Energy Pvt Ltd by Waaree Forever Energies Pvt Ltd, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the company. The acquisition is solely for facilitating and holding specific power projects under the independent power producer (IPP) framework.

    Shares of Waaree Energies gained 6.97% to hit an intraday high of ₹2992.3 apiece on Thursday, May 29. The stock has gained 11.6% in the past month.

  • ‘Government’s strategy for renewable energies development continuously followed up’

    ‘Government’s strategy for renewable energies development continuously followed up’

    He made the remarks in the 9th Renewable Energy Conference and Exhibition of Iran (IRAN REC 2025) held at Milad Tower in Tehran.

    Emphasizing the necessity of replacing electricity with gas in the field of heating, he stated: “In all aspects, including the production and import of solar panels, equipping power plants, modifying production lines for cooling and heating equipment, and construction engineering, precise and executive planning is being carried out with the aim of increasing energy efficiency.”

    Addressing the same conference, Energy Minister Abbas Ali-Abadi said that the capacity of Iran’s solar farms capacity has been almost doubled over the past seven months.

    He announced efforts to facilitate activities in the development of renewables, and in this regard, improving the business environment for those active in this field is on the agenda.

    The minister also considered the goal of the government and the Ministry of Energy to facilitate the activities of the private sector in the development of renewables.

    In early March, the Iranian parliament (Majlis) approved the country’s membership in the International Solar Energy Society (ISES).

    Founded in 1954, ISES is an UN-accredited membership organization promoting and envisioning a world with 100 percent renewable energy for everyone used wisely and efficiently.

    The ISES Headquarters are based in Germany. ISES is the largest international solar organization, with extensive membership worldwide. It has members in more than 110 countries, and Global contacts and partners in over 50 countries with thousands of associate members, and almost 100 company and institutional members throughout the world.  

    ISES has a track record of strongly supporting the solar industry, helping shape public opinion through education and outreach activities, and providing informed comment on global issues.

  • Solveo Energies Secures €98M from Mirova to Accelerate Renewable Energy Rollout

    Solveo Energies Secures €98M from Mirova to Accelerate Renewable Energy Rollout

    • €98M raised to transition Solveo Energies from development to project commissioning, targeting 800 MW by 2030.
    • Mirova-led investment validates Solveo’s full value-chain model and regional energy strategy.
    • Funding supports €875M in total investments toward France’s carbon neutrality goals.

    Solveo Energies, a French independent renewable energy producer, has raised €98 million in a major financing round led by Mirova, a responsible investment affiliate of Natixis Investment Managers. The funding will fast-track the commissioning of renewable projects and support Solveo’s long-term ambition of deploying 800 MW in installed capacity by 2030.

    We are very proud to welcome Mirova into our entrepreneurial adventure,” said Jean-Marc Mateos, President of Solveo Energies. “This transaction strengthens our model as an independent and territorially anchored player. Thanks to this long-term strategic partnership, we have the means to accelerate our development, solidify our portfolio, and remain true to our convictions: producing sustainable, local energy that respects the regions.”

    Jocelyn Dioux, Investment Director at Mirova, noted: “We were particularly convinced by the quality of the teams, the relevance of the asset portfolio, the rigor of the processes, and the clear strategic vision of the company.”

    The round was supported by Natixis Partners (M&A), Jeantet (legal), Syneria (technical), KPMG (financial), and De Gaulle Fleurance (legal/tax) on Solveo’s side, while Mirova was advised by Gottengreen, White & Case, and PwC.

    This strategic capital infusion positions Solveo to play a leading role in France’s decarbonization efforts, while delivering scalable, regionally aligned energy infrastructure.

  • Mirny: A Giant Onshore Wind Project in Kazakhstan

    Mirny: A Giant Onshore Wind Project in Kazakhstan

    TotalEnergies signed an investment agreement with the Government of Kazakhstan for the giant Mirny onshore wind project in response to the dual challenge of reducing carbon emissions and electrifying isolated rural areas. Developed in partnership with the National Wealth Fund Samruk-Kazyna and the National Company KazMunayGas, the wind farm will be capable of supplying one million people with electricity from renewable sources, thereby helping decarbonize the country’s energy mix.

    In the Zhambyl region in southeast Kazakhstan, we are developing the Mirny onshore wind project with our partners. It will harness the winds that sweep across the region’s semi-arid expanses (averaging 8.9 meters per second per year) and transform them into low-carbon electricity. Featuring a total capacity of one gigawatt (GW), this onshore wind farm’s 140 wind turbines will be combined with a 600 megawatt-hours (MWh) battery-based ESS for a reliable and sustainable power supply.

    Contributing to Kazakhstan’s energy transition

    In a country where our Company has been active since 1992, especially through our hydrocarbon production activities, the Mirny project perfectly illustrates the multi-energy strategy that we are implementing in oil and gas countries. Historically focused on oil and gas, and experiencing sustained growth in its energy demand, Kazakhstan has set itself the target of increasing the proportion of renewable energies in its electricity production to 15% by 2030(1).

    According to a 25-year power purchase agreement (PPA) signed in June 2023, all the electricity produced by the Mirny project will be sold to the Financial Settlement Center of Renewable Energy, a public entity owned by the Government of Kazakhstan, for the supply of the national grid. The Mirny facilities will deliver 4 TWh a year of renewable electricity, covering the needs of one million inhabitants, i.e. 4% of the country’s production. Mirny will reinforce the solar power plants that we already operate in the country and will help avoid 3.5 million tons of CO2 emissions per year.

    Meeting the technical challenges of a wind farm in the heart of Kazakhstan

    The Mirny wind farm is currently the largest wind farm project ever undertaken in Kazakhstan. It represents a real technical challenge, not least because of its sheer size (it is almost 10 times bigger than the country’s largest solar power plant), the region’s extreme weather conditions (a summer-winter temperature difference of 70°C), and its distance from the electricity grid, requiring the construction of more than 200 km of power lines. Construction is due to start in the fall of 2025, with the first electricity injected into the grid in 2028.