New CEO for one of KC’s most-talked-about startups could be the first step toward an IPO

September 26, 2023  |  Tommy Felts

Riddhiman Das and Prat Moghe, TripleBlind

A new CEO for Kansas City-based TripleBlind allows the privacy tech startup to advance into a growth stage company — one potentially headed toward a public offering — taking advantage of recent momentum around enterprise artificial intelligence solutions, said Riddhiman Das.

TripleBlind on Monday announced the appointment of Prat Moghe, former executive vice president of the software firm Cloudera, as its new CEO. Moghe succeeds Das, co-founder of TripleBlind, who is transitioning into a chief product officer role.

“It was an easy decision professionally and personally,” Das told Startland News. “Prat adds rocket boosters to TripleBlind, and our partnership here allows us to use our complementary skills and background to build a generation-defining company.”

Moghe is tasked with spearheading the growth of TripleBlind’s team, customer base, and product offerings.

The company also this week revealed plans for its AI Privacy Platform to ensure automatic end-to-end privacy protection across the breadth of the full AI lifecycle from analytics, training, prompting, and inferencing.

“With the recent advancements in Generative AI and LLMs [large language models], enterprises looking to adopt them are looking for ways to develop trust in them, and I’m excited to partner with Prat to bring the Trust Layer for Data across the AI lifecycle to market,” Das said.

TripleBlind — the leading company offering data and algorithm privacy across healthcare and financial services — is expected to continue to be Kansas City-based with the leadership addition.

“I am excited to be part of the team to help accelerate the growth of responsible AI powered by enterprise data,” said Moghe, who brings a wealth of experience from Cloudera and Netezza, as well as growing early-stage startups through product market fit. “A growing number of healthcare systems and enterprises are excited to partner with us, and we’re looking forward to welcoming them to our early access program.”

Company officials indicated this week TripleBlind could take steps to go public with the business to help amplify the impact of its solutions.

“We believe that the ability to unlock data silos by making privacy a non-concern really unlocks the tremendous amount of potential that is trapped behind enterprise firewalls,” Das said. “That is an incredibly large impact that TripleBlind is seeking to deliver, which does feel like an IPO worthy opportunity. The IPO is a representation of the scale of the problem to solve, not necessarily an end goal in and of itself.”

Greg Storm, TripleBlind

Greg Storm, TripleBlind

From its inception, TripleBlind has focused on developing the most performant and usable technologies that ensure privacy between AI models and sensitive data, the company said. It has partnered with leading healthcare providers to develop transformative platforms to privately discover, validate and deploy AI algorithms on de-identified data to accelerate patient outcomes.

The TripleBlind team — also led by Greg Storm, co-founder, and Craig Gentry, chief technology officer — includes some of the world’s leading cryptographers and is backed by General Catalyst, Mayo Clinic, Accenture, and locally KCRise Fund.

Its newly announced platform is built on patented AI Blinding technologies, such as Blind Learning and Blind Inferencing, that provide industry leading price performance and accuracy for privacy enhancement for all AI workloads.

“TripleBlind’s AI Privacy Platform is the result of years of research and multiple inventions by some of the most brilliant minds in cryptography and privacy,” said Moghe.

Click here to read more from Riddhiman Das about the new platform and its approach to AI privacy.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Dundee, Lewis & Clark VCs aim to raise Kansas City’s risk capital tide

        By Tommy Felts | February 9, 2016

        Kansas City boasts a hearty roster of attractive early-stage investment opportunities. And that’s why two Midwestern venture capital firms with fresh funds are making the Kansas City area a key part of their investment strategies. Both Omaha-based Dundee Venture Capital and St. Louis-based Lewis & Clark Ventures are eyeing Kansas City-area startups for deals varying…

        Ahead of Valentine’s, e-commerce floral shop Zinnia prunes itself to grow

        By Tommy Felts | February 9, 2016

        Zinnia is not your mom-and-pop local florist — although the company did have a brief iteration as one lasting about a blink last year. It’s also not your big-box, online flower retailer — although their ecommerce site is a beautiful example of what a website focused on the customer experience can look like. The company…

        LaunchKC delivering another $500K in 2016

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2016

        Kansas City’s popular grant competition, LaunchKC, will be doling out another $500,000 in 2016 to startups around the world. LaunchKC in April will open the application period for its international competition, which will issue ten $50,000 grants to winners during the second-annual Techweek Kansas City conference. Drew Solomon, vice president of business and job development…

        Key legislator optimistic in the future of Kansas’ angel tax credits

        By Tommy Felts | February 5, 2016

        A Kansas lawmaker overseeing discussion on the future of the state’s angel investor tax credits is confident the program will be made a budgetary priority by his peers in legislature. Rep. Marvin Kleeb, R-Overland Park, said that he and fellow members of the Kansas Committee on Taxation listened to thorough testimony Wednesday during a hearing…