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    Home»Technology»Samsung and Hyundai lead reported investment into robotics data provider Config
    Technology

    Samsung and Hyundai lead reported investment into robotics data provider Config

    MakersBy MakersMay 11, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read7 Views
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    Samsung and Hyundai lead reported investment into robotics data provider Config
    Major South Korean manufacturers Samsung, Hyundai, and LG have reportedly backed Config, a startup aiming to become the data infrastructure for global robotics.
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    The venture capital arms of several South Korean industrial giants, including Samsung Venture Investment, have reportedly backed a major seed funding round for Config, a robotics startup with operations in Seoul and San Jose. According to reports, the investment also drew participation from the venture divisions of Hyundai and LG, signalling a unified move by South Korea’s largest manufacturers to solve the data bottleneck currently hindering the development of robotic foundation models. Config is positioning itself as a central infrastructure provider for the robotics industry, with analysts drawing parallels to the role Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) plays in the semiconductor sector. While TSMC provides the physical fabrication for global chip designs, Config aims to provide the “data fabrication” for global robotics. The startup specialises in creating the data layer required for robotic foundation models (RFMs), which allow machines to generalise tasks across different environments rather than remaining limited to single, repetitive actions on a factory floor. The strategic weight of this deal is significant for the Asian manufacturing corridor. South Korea, along with Japan and Taiwan, has long relied on hardware exports and optimised supply chains to drive economic growth. As the global industrial race shifts toward autonomous systems, the primary challenge is no longer just building the hardware, but ensuring that hardware is intelligent enough to adapt to changing environments. By backing Config, these industrial leaders are securing a position in the development of next-generation industrial connectivity.

    Standardising Data for the Next Industrial Leap

    The current state of robotics is often siloed, with separate manufacturers using proprietary software and data formats that do not communicate with one another. This fragmentation makes it difficult to train large-scale AI models that require massive amounts of diverse operational data. Config’s platform is designed to ingest, clean, and standardise this information, creating a unified flow that can be used to refine robotic intelligence at scale. For an engineer at a large-scale plant, this shift mirrors the evolution of the African IoT sector growth through industrial connectivity, where the focus has moved from simple monitoring to deep, data-driven operational insights. By standardising how robots learn from their movements and environment, Config reduces the time and cost associated with deploying new automation technologies. Manufacturers can essentially plug into a pre-existing intelligence layer rather than starting from scratch for every new facility.

    Solving the Scarcity of Physical AI Training Data

    While generative AI for text and images has benefited from the vast resources of the open internet, physical AI lacks a similar repository. Real-world physical data is expensive to collect and often sensitive. Config addresses this by providing tools that bridge the gap between simulation and reality, allowing roboticists to leverage both synthetic and real-world datasets effectively. This approach to data management is gaining traction as industries look for ways to maintain productivity amid rising labour costs and shifting demographics. Much like how Jesutomiwa Salam uses scarcity as a blueprint for solving complex computational problems, Config focuses on the scarcity of robot data as a competitive advantage by creating an efficient pipeline for its processing. Their software ensures that the data used to train a robotic arm in one factory remains relevant and applicable if that same model is deployed in a different context elsewhere.

    Industrial Implications for Global Supply Chains

    The involvement of Hyundai and LG alongside Samsung suggests that the applications for this technology will span multiple sectors, from automotive assembly lines to consumer electronics packaging and logistics. Hyundai, in particular, has been aggressive in its robotics acquisition strategy, and this reported funding round indicates a desire to control the intelligence layer that powers those hardware assets. This movement is not happening in a vacuum. Governments across Asia are providing support for physical AI as a matter of national industrial policy. By centralising the data infrastructure, these companies are attempting to set the global standard for how robots are trained, ensuring that the next generation of industrial productivity remains influenced by established technical standards. As these models become more sophisticated, the reliability of the underlying digital infrastructure becomes paramount. We have seen similar trends in fintech, where African digital payments must shift focus to infrastructure reliability to support high-volume transactions; likewise, industrial robotics require unerring data pipelines to prevent costly downtime or physical accidents on the factory floor. Config is expected to use this recent influx of capital to expand its engineering teams in both Seoul and San Jose while forging deeper integration partnerships with its backers’ production lines. If the startup succeeds in becoming the primary data backbone for the sector, it could fundamentally change how industrial machines are programmed and deployed worldwide.
    config robotics startup funding config seoul san jose data infrastructure hyundai robotics investment industrial connectivity manufacturing technology robotic foundation models samsung venture investment south korea robotics
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