Stilta, a company that helps corporations locate intellectual property they have somehow misplaced, announced a $10.5 million seed round Tuesday led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Y Combinator and a roster of operators from OpenAI, Legora, and Lovable. The capital arrives with the implicit assumption that there exists a substantial, repeatable market of enterprises frantically searching their filing cabinets for patents they forgot they registered. One must admire the audacity required to convince a16z that this is not, in fact, the kind of problem that resolves itself after one moderately competent intern spends four hours on a patent database.
Stilta's core value proposition appears to be the digitization and discovery of dormant patent portfolios—essentially, a software layer atop existing patent management infrastructure masquerading as venture-scale innovation. The company offers no public information on revenue, customer count, or deployment timeline, which is perfectly normal for a seed-stage legal tech company and certainly not a red flag suggesting the founders built a feature, not a business. The business model presumably involves charging companies per "rediscovered" patent or via some form of SaaS subscription, though one wonders whether General Counsel offices across America are currently hiring search-and-rescue teams to locate their own intellectual property. If they were, McKinsey would have already sold them a $5 million consulting engagement on the topic, and we would not need Stilta.
Andreessen Horowitz has made a cottage industry of betting on "unsexy" enterprise software that solves "real problems." Their track record includes both genuine successes (Figma) and spectacular misfires (Zenreach, a hyperlocal marketing startup that burned through capital like a supernova). Y Combinator, meanwhile, has returned to its roots of funding software companies that solve problems for other software companies, which is to say: betting that if you can sell to tech operators, you can sell to anyone. The presence of OpenAI operators in this round suggests that generative AI is somehow involved, which either means Stilta trained a model to read patent documents, or management simply invited an AI expert to the dinner table and the conversation went: "So, what do you think about our idea?" "Sounds cool, I'm in."
The company's founding story—"we built a tool to help us find our own patents and realized we could sell it"—is a classic Silicon Valley inception myth, beloved by investors because it implies product-market fit discovered through dogfooding rather than customer interviews. The press release likely contains language about "unlocking hidden value in corporate IP portfolios" and "streamlining patent discovery workflows," translations of which read: "we made a database searchable" and "we put a UI on top of existing patent data." Stilta's pitch to investors presumably emphasized how much dead capital corporations have trapped in forgotten patents, a number that sounds large until you ask yourself whether the average fortune 500 company truly needs an external startup to conduct a basic inventory of their own assets.
The real risk is not market saturation or competitive pressure—it is the profound question of whether this problem is actually worth solving at venture scale. Patent management is a function typically handled by in-house counsel, external IP firms, or both, and neither constituency has expressed urgent demand for a startup solution. If Stilta's founders were solving a problem they personally experienced, the question becomes: how many other companies face this exact problem? If the answer is "well, actually, most large enterprises," then why haven't existing legal tech players like Anaqua or Dennemeyer already built this capability? If the answer is "not that many," then $10.5 million is a lot of capital to raise for a niche consulting tool.
This deal exemplifies the current state of late-stage VC: capital so abundant that investors have begun funding solutions to problems that primarily exist in the minds of founders. The presence of a16z and Y Combinator lends credibility through sheer institutional reputation, but credibility is not the same as wisdom. Both organizations benefit from this dynamic—they get to deploy capital quickly, score ownership in an early-stage company, and maintain optionality in case the market suddenly decides that lost patents are the next trillion-dollar opportunity.
In a rational market, Stilta would be a five-person consulting firm or a feature sold by an existing enterprise software vendor, not a $10.5 million seed investment banking on the idea that finding things you already own is a scalable business problem.
"Rediscover"
Stilta solves the critical problem of companies not knowing what they already own.
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Read more →DumbCapital covers venture capital and M&A in North America with the skepticism these markets have long deserved and rarely received. We are not impressed by large numbers. We are not moved by press releases. All articles are satirical commentary based on real, publicly reported deals. Nothing here is financial advice.