Niantic Spatial says Pokémon Go data is “not part of” its deal with spatial AI company Vantor, after concerns that game data could be used for military drones
The company says it no longer receives data from the monster-catching app after Niantic was acquired by Scopely
Niantic Spatial partners with Coco Robotics to add Niantic's Visual Positioning System trained on data from Pokémon Go and Ingress into Coco's delivery robots
Pokémon Go was the world's first augmented-reality megahit. Released in 2016 by the Google spinout Niantic …Forums:r/TheSilphRoadForums:r/TheSilphRoad:MIT Technology Review: How Pokémon Go is giving ...
Niantic Spatial partners with Coco Robotics to integrate a visual positioning system trained on data from Pokemon Go and Ingress into a fleet of delivery robots
Pokémon Go was the world's first augmented-reality megahit. Released in 2016 by the Google spinout Niantic …Forums:r/TheSilphRoadForums:r/TheSilphRoad:MIT Technology Review: How Pokémon Go is giving ...
An interview with Niantic CEO John Hanke on the company selling its games business, pivoting to enterprise AI, returning to its digital mapping roots, and more
www.forbes.com/sites/richar... @randomjunque : So we helped create this sorta boring dystopia by playing games on our cell phones, who'da think?: www.forbes.com/sites/richar... #dystopia #ai #niantic ...
Niantic's $3.5B deal gives Scopely, acquired by Saudi-owned Savvy Games Group in 2023 for $4.9B, a total audience of 500M+ players, driven by Monopoly Go!
Financial Times :
Niantic Labs says it is selling its video game division, including Pokémon Go, to Saudi Arabia-owned developer Scopely for $3.5B, subject to regulatory approval
The $3.5 billion Scopely deal could bring Niantic's AR gaming catalog under Saudi ownership.
Sources: Niantic is in talks to sell its video games unit to Saudi Arabia-owned Scopely for ~$3.5B; the deal would include Pokémon Go and its other mobile games
A deal could be announced in coming weeks. The price being discussed is about $3.5 billion, according to one of the people.
Niantic says it is using data generated by Pokémon Go players to create a large geospatial model, or LGM, that can navigate the real world and power robots
Niantic says it is using data generated by Pokémon Go players to create a “Large Geospatial Model” that can navigate the real world and power robots.
Niantic lays off 230 employees, closes its Los Angeles studio, and moves away from in-house game development, saying its expenses grew faster than its revenue
After Niantic's latest AR game Peridot got negative app store reviews and few downloads, a look at the company's metaverse games struggling to find an audience
Cecilia D'Anastasio / Bloomberg :