Share this article

Blockchain Data Warehouse Space and Time Raises $20M Series A to Accelerate Development of AI Tools

The funding round, which brings Space and Time's total backing to $50 million, was led by Framework Ventures, Lightspeed Faction, Arrington Capital and Hivemind Capital

Space and Time co-founders Scott Dykstra (left) and Nate Holiday (Space and Time)
Space and Time co-founders Scott Dykstra (left) and Nate Holiday (Space and Time)

Space and Time (SxT), a blockchain-native data warehouse that incorporates artificial intelligence (AI) tools to build applications using its data, has raised $20 million in Series A funding.

The funding round, which takes SxT's total backing to $50 million, was led by Framework Ventures, Lightspeed Faction, Arrington Capital and Hivemind Capital, according to an emailed announcement on Tuesday.

jwp-player-placeholder
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

The company's aim is to decentralized ownership of the data which powers AI-based applications, thus preventing a few powerful entities from dominating the sector.

SxT's network comprises data collected from the major blockchains such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, off-chain datasets with a zero-knowledge coprocressor which processes the data at scale.

Read More: AI-Related Coins Slide as Google Search Shows Peak Retail Investor Interest


Jamie Crawley

Jamie has been part of CoinDesk's news team since February 2021, focusing on breaking news, Bitcoin tech and protocols and crypto VC. He holds BTC, ETH and DOGE.

Jamie Crawley

More For You

Multisig Failures Dominate as $2B Is Lost in Web3 Hacks in the First Half

Alt

A wave of multisig-related hacks and operational misconfiguration led to catastrophic losses in the first half of 2025.

What to know:

  • Over $2 billion was lost to Web3 hacks in the first half of the year, with the first quarter alone surpassing 2024’s total.
  • Multisig wallet mismanagement and UI tampering caused the majority of major exploits.
  • Hacken urges real-time monitoring and automated controls to prevent operational failures.