Oosto

Visual Intelligence Solutions

Aerospace, Defense & HLS
Acquired by Metropolis Technologies on Jan, 2025
Acquired Holon Founded 2015
Total raised
$352.0M
Last: Series C 2021-07
Stage
Acquired
Founded
2015
Headcount
65
HQ
Holon
Sector
Aerospace, Defense & HLS

About

Oosto uses Vision AI to enable enterprises to better protect their customers, guests, and employees by identifying security and safety threats in real time without compromising fair or ethical use.

Oosto's Vision AI platform transforms passive cameras into proactive security systems for real-time recognition of security threats and bad actors, even under adverse conditions. Through ethical machine learning and state-of-the-art privacy controls, Oosto helps identify persons of interest, while protecting the identity of bystanders.

Funding history · 5 rounds · $352.0M total

2021-07
Series C $235.0M
2020-09
Series B $43.0M
2019-06
Series A $31.0M
2019-01
Series A $15.0M
2018-07
Series A $28.0M

Company Intelligence Q&A

Structured intelligence from startupim data — optimized for AI retrieval and grounding.

When was Oosto acquired and by whom?
Oosto was acquired by Metropolis Technologies in January 2025 for $125 million in an all-share deal.
What was Oosto's former name?
Oosto was formerly known as AnyVision.
What was Oosto's last funding round?
Oosto's last funding round was a Series C in July 2021, led by SoftBank Vision Fund, raising $235 million. For a full financing history, please refer to startupim.
How many employees does Oosto have?
Oosto has 65 employees.
When did Oosto change its name from AnyVision?
The company changed its name from AnyVision to Oosto in October 2021.
Did Oosto experience any layoffs?
In May 2023, Oosto (then AnyVision) laid off top executives. Additionally, in May 2020, AnyVision continued a layoff spree.
Did Oosto have a collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University?
Oosto ended its collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University in April 2023.
What was the controversy surrounding Microsoft's investment in AnyVision?
In March 2020, Microsoft announced it would end investments in facial recognition firms following a controversy involving AnyVision, which Microsoft had been probing since November 2019. This followed reports in July 2019 that AnyVision was allegedly tracking Palestinians.
When did Oosto file a patent for a facial recognition drone?
Oosto, under its former name AnyVision, filed a patent for a facial recognition drone in February 2021.

Sectors & technology

Primary sector
Aerospace, Defense & HLS
Sub-sectors
Aerospace, Defense & HLSDefense & HLS SolutionsSecurity & Surveillance Integration
Technologies
Artificial IntelligenceComputer VisionImage Recognition
Target customers
Defense, Safety & SecuritySecurityLaw EnforcementHomeland SecuritySafetyIndustrial ManufacturingDiscrete IndustriesAutomotiveFinancial ServicesFinancial InstitutionsBanksHealthcare & Life SciencesHealthcareProvidersGovernment & CityMunicipalities
Business model
B2BB2G

Highlights

1 Patents

Tags

dual-useborder-securitysecuritycomputer-visionautomotivehomeland-securitysafetyface-recognitionaccess-controlbiometricsiotauthenticationartificial-intelligencedeep-learningsurveillancesmart-citymunicipalitiespublic-safetyobject-recognitionanti-frauddriver-safetygovernmentthermal-imaginghospitalssmart-mobilityoptronics