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A Weekly Roundup of Startups: Triumphs, Setbacks, and Bright Spots

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Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje’s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Image Credits: OdaHardware is hard, episode 234: We already knew that Humane’s Ai Pin launch was going anything but smoothly. Image Credits: Sword Health / CompanyLive by the sword : Sword Health, an AI-powered virtual physical therapy startup, raised a $30 million primary funding round and a $130 million secondary funding round that brought its valuation to $3 billion. : Sword Health, an AI-powered virtual physical therapy startup, raised a $30 million primary funding round and a $130 million secondary funding round that brought its valuation to $3 billion. Where’s your head at: Austrian startup Storyblok raised $80 million to add more AI to its “headless” content management system (CMS) for non-technical people.

“Discovering the Bright Side: True Anomaly’s CEO Overcomes Challenges on Company’s Debut Mission”

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True Anomaly‘s first mission didn’t go as planned by any stretch of the imagination, but the space and defense startup’s CEO, Even Rogers, said he doesn’t consider it a failure. The aim of this first mission, Mission X, was to demonstrate these capabilities on orbit for the first time. True Anomaly closed a $100 million Series B round last year to accelerate those plans. By all accounts, the outcome of Mission X has not slowed the company down whatsoever: True Anomaly is planning on flying at least twice more in the next twelve months. “The success story of Jackal Mission X is twofold,” Rogers said.

Can the antitrust case against Apple be seen as a glimmer of hope for Epic Games?

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Meanwhile, Fortnite maker Epic Games has been accusing Apple’s iOS App Store of antitrust violations for years in an ongoing, arduous legal battle. “Apple often enforces its App Store rules arbitrarily,” the suit says. And unlike Android devices, iPhones do not allow for sideloading apps, meaning that Apple has control over any app in its App Store. “While Apple has reduced the tax it collects from a subset of developers, Apple still extracts 30 percent from many app makers,” the suit says. On Thursday, the Coalition for App Fairness (CAF) – which includes Epic Games, Spotify, Deezer, Proton and other companies – released a statement in favor of the DOJ’s action against Apple.