Uare.ai, the startup formerly known as Eternos, has raised $10.3 million in seed funding to develop what it calls “individual artificial intelligence.”
The round was led by Mayfield Fund and Boldstart Ventures, with participation from several angel investors focused on the future of personal computing.
The company’s mission is both simple and radical: to create AI agents that think and communicate like the people they represent.
These personal models, known internally as “Human Life Models,” are trained on each user’s own writing, voice, and professional history.
Rather than pulling from a vast dataset of internet text, they learn only from the individual’s chosen data, making the model a private reflection of one person’s mind and experience.
Co-founder and CEO Ryan Radloff described the vision as “AI that belongs to you, not the internet.” The idea is that individuals could use their own model to scale their time, expertise, or creative work, whether that means responding to emails, coaching clients, or even generating new projects that carry their tone and judgment.
Building Trust In The Age Of Personal AI
The company’s rebrand from Eternos makes a shift away from digital immortality and toward active, real-time personal productivity.
Eternos had focused on preserving people’s memories and stories for future generations.
Uare.ai reframes that goal for the present, turning the same principle into a productivity platform: your AI should not just remember you but help you work smarter while you’re still here.
Privacy and consent are central to its model. Uare.ai says users retain ownership of their data and the resulting models.
The company is building an architecture that ensures personal information remains under user control, addressing a growing concern in the broader AI industry about how individual data is used and monetized.
A Glimpse Of Where AI Might Be Heading
The idea of “individual AI” is emerging as a counter-trend to general models like GPT or Gemini, which offer broad intelligence but little personal context.
If Uare.ai succeeds, it could signal a shift toward smaller, identity-anchored models that live alongside people’s workflows, offering continuity, memory, and trust.
For creators, consultants, and professionals, such models could act as digital counterparts, partners that extend their expertise without replacing their judgment.
For investors, it marks a growing interest in “AI intimacy,” where the next wave of innovation focuses less on scale and more on self.
Summary
Uare.ai’s $10.3 million seed round gives it the capital to explore that future. The company now faces the challenge of proving that people will trust and adopt AI that feels personal, not corporate.
If it succeeds, it could redefine how individuals interact with technology, and how intelligence itself becomes something each of us can truly own.
