Last fall, as venture capitalists Record amounts of money are being sunk into artificial intelligenceA group of investors met to evaluate a startup. Infinity Artificial Intelligence Institute produced software for automatically tuning AI models. This made them more efficient and less expensive. The founders seemed to be strong and the market appeared to be expanding rapidly. One half of investors was cautious, while the other half saw dollar sign. One investor referred to the transaction as an “absolute banger.”
The $100,000 invested by the VCs in the seed round was also real. The VCs were actually AI agents who worked for a platform called ADINAutonomous Deal Investing Network
ADIN will replace human analysts who are involved in venture deals by 2025. When you upload a pitch deck for a new startup, it will produce a comprehensive analysis of its founding team and business model, as well as a checklist of compliance and diligence risks. It also provides an estimation of the market size and valuation. ADIN’s agentic investor model has a dozen distinct investors. Each one is characterized by a different investing philosophy and persona. The Tech Oracle examines the startup’s base technology. The Unit Master assesses financial fundamentals. Peter Thiel, looks for market dominance. The majority of agents who like the startup suggest the amount ADIN should spend on the deal. This is done in an hour by the platform, compared with days or even weeks for an analyst from a VC.
“The game of venture doesn’t have a high success rate,” Aaron Wright is the founder of ADIN, which owns ADIN. Tribute Labs. The current approach—a kind of finger-in-the-air, gut intuition about who and what will become the great unicorns of tomorrow—yields “home runs,” Approximately 1 percent the time, a startup will return more than 10x of its invested capital. Three-fourths Venture deals do not even cover the costs of capital.
Wright thinks AI models will improve odds. He thinks venture capital will enter a new moneyball phase, in which quantitative methods replace human intuition. Everyone is going to start hitting more homeruns. “Increasingly, these systems will be able to eliminate bad projects, focus on those that are more successful, and also lower the cost of operating some of these enterprises,” Wright. Wright says that AI agents may be able to become some of the top venture investors around in just a few short years.
What happens if that occurs? “There may be no more Sand Hill Road.”
The venture capitalists collectively invested over $200 billion AI was a major focus of investment last year. AI-based models are changing the way that investors look at companies and industries. Vinod Khosla founded Khosla Ventures. predicted AI will take over 80 percent of all job functions by 2030. Many venture capitalists appear to underestimate the impact of AI on their jobs.
Marc Andreessen—the celebrity venture capitalist and cofounder of Andreessen Horowitz—said on an episode of his podcast, The Ben & Marc ShowWhen AI does everything, venture capital could be a great option “one of the last remaining fields that people are still doing.” He argued that the job was more than simply writing checks; it also involved choosing the best ideas at the correct time with the most appropriate people and then leading them to achieve success.
“That’s not science, that’s art,” Andreessen continued. “If it was a science, you could eventually have somebody who just dials it in and gets 8 out of 10. But in the real world, it’s not like that. You’re in the fluke business. There’s an intangibility to it. There’s a taste aspect.”

