Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Atlanta credit bureau and employment verification (NYSE: EFX) ~$5.7B FY2024 revenue (+7%); The Work Number 650M employee records, EFX Cloud transformation post-2017 breach, competing with TransUnion and Experian.
Equifax Inc. is an Atlanta, Georgia-based global data, analytics, and technology company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: EFX) as an S&P 500 Financials component — providing credit information (consumer and commercial credit reports, scores), employment and income verification, fraud prevention, and analytics through three business units: Workforce Solutions (The Work Number — employment and income verification database with 650 million employee records), US Information Solutions (USIS — US consumer and commercial credit reports and analytics), and International (credit bureaus in 24 countries) through approximately 14,000 employees. In fiscal year 2024, Equifax reported revenues of approximately $5.7 billion (+7% year-over-year) driven by Workforce Solutions' non-mortgage verification revenue growth (tenant screening, auto lending, government social services verification) offsetting continued weakness in mortgage origination verification volumes (lower mortgage market activity reducing income verification demand from mortgage lenders). CEO Mark Begor has rebuilt Equifax after the transformational 2017 data breach (exposing 147 million Americans' SSNs, birthdates, and credit information — the largest US data breach at the time, resulting in $1.38 billion FTC settlement, massive security investment, and significant reputational damage) through the $1.5 billion "EFX2020" technology transformation (rebuilding all Equifax systems on cloud-native AWS infrastructure) that modernized Equifax's data security, analytics capabilities, and product development velocity. The EFX Cloud infrastructure (completed in 2022) enables Equifax to launch new data products within weeks rather than years — creating competitive differentiation versus legacy systems maintained by TransUnion and Experian.
SF autonomous manufacturing software by Tesla Autopilot/Waymo engineers applying self-driving AI to factory control; $12.8M Khosla/Lenovo Capital-backed with CyberRealm platform competing with Sight Machine and Rockwell for factory autonomy.
Industrial Next is a San Francisco-based autonomous manufacturing software company — backed by $12.8 million from Khosla Ventures, AlphaX Partners, Lenovo Capital, Miracleplus, and Xiaomi — applying self-driving technology principles and robotics AI architectures developed for autonomous vehicles to factory automation, enabling manufacturers to run real-time dynamic process adjustments across factory equipment that respond to changing conditions (material variations, equipment wear, environmental factors) without manual operator intervention. Founded in 2021 by Allen Pan and Lukas Pankau — alumni of Tesla's Autopilot team and Tesla's Fremont autonomous manufacturing operations, and Waymo's sensor and communications architecture — Industrial Next commercializes the manufacturing AI technology that Tesla developed internally for its own gigafactories through the Factory Autonomy Framework (CyberRealm).
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