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Google DeepMind hires staff from Contextual AI in licensing deal, source says

By Thomson Reuters May 19, 2026 | 2:42 PM

May 19 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s AI research subsidiary, Google DeepMind, has agreed to recruit more than 20 researchers from AI startup Contextual AI and license its technology, a ​person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.

Alphabet ‌paid between $80 million and $90 million to Contextual as part of the agreement, and Contextual’s co-founder and CEO Douwe Kiela is among those joining DeepMind, according to the source.

Google declined to comment and Contextual did not immediately respond ‌to ​a request for comment.

The agreement, first ⁠reported by Bloomberg News, ⁠is the latest move by the Google parent to strike a licensing deal to acquire talent. Last year, it paid $2.4 billion in license fees as part of a deal to ​use some of AI code generation startup Windsurf’s technology under non-exclusive terms and to hire several key staff.

In 2024, ⁠Google signed a licensing deal with ⁠Character.AI that granted it a non-exclusive license to ​the chatbot maker’s large language model technology.

Acquihires, in which major tech ​companies pay large sums to secure the talent and ‌technology of promising startups without formally acquiring them, are increasingly viewed by antitrust regulators as an attempt to evade merger rules.

Unlike acquisitions that would give the buyer a controlling stake, these ⁠deals do not require a review by U.S. antitrust regulators.

In December, Nvidia agreed to license chip technology from Groq and to hire ⁠its CEO, without buying ‌the startup.

Companies’ efforts to sidestep U.S. antitrust ⁠scrutiny through tactics such as acquihires are a “red ​flag,” ‌Acting Assistant Attorney General Omeed Assefi told ​Reuters in ⁠March.

Contextual AI raised $80 million in a Series A funding round in 2024, led by venture capital firm Greycroft and existing investors, including Bain Capital Ventures and Lightspeed.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City and Kenrick Cai in San Francisco; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar ​and Edmund Klamann)