IIT Kharagpur graduates Varun Vammadi and Esha Maindeep have secured $61 million in Series A funding for their AI startup Giga, but their achievement was marred by racist online attacks targeting their Indian heritage and appearance.
Key Takeaways
- IIT Kharagpur alumni raised $61M for AI startup Giga
- Funding led by Redpoint Ventures with Y Combinator, Nexus participation
- Founders faced racist comments after funding announcement
- Both turned down high-paying jobs to pursue AI venture
Silicon Valley Success Story
Varun Vammadi and Esha Maindeep’s San Francisco-based startup Giga has become a classic Silicon Valley success story. The Series A round was led by Redpoint Ventures with participation from Y Combinator and Nexus Venture Partners.
What makes their journey remarkable is their decision to turn down lucrative career opportunities. Both chose entrepreneurship over high-paying positions in finance and academia.
Racist Backlash After Funding Announcement
The Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees announced their $61 million milestone in an X video, revealing their technology is already used by DoorDash and will expand to Fortune 100 companies.
Instead of celebrating their innovation, some users responded with racist remarks about their appearance and Indian background. One comment stated: “Indians are ugli in general but you sir lol.” Another remarked: “If you raise $61M maybe hire attractive people for the demo.”
Supporters quickly defended the founders. “When people can’t compete in brilliance, they attack appearance. That’s not humour, that’s insecurity,” one user replied. Another noted: “Watch them become millionaires while you’re stuck with a $12-an-hour job.”
The Opportunities They Turned Down
A two-year-old LinkedIn post from Varun has gone viral, revealing the scale of opportunities they sacrificed. He wrote: “I received a PhD offer from Stanford University and a $525K job offer from an international HFT as a quant trader. We left all those opportunities to pursue our passion towards solving challenging problems in machine learning.”
Co-founder Esha Manideep similarly turned down a “$150K job as a system engineer role with a prominent Indian HFT firm.”
Shared just before Giga’s 2023 launch, the post has become emblematic of tech risk-taking, with users calling it a “masterclass in long-term thinking.”
Giga’s AI Technology
Giga develops voice-based AI agents that help businesses automate customer support. Their technology can handle hundreds of thousands of daily conversations, with DoorDash already among their clients.
Growing Trend Among Indian Engineers
Varun and Esha represent a growing trend of young Indian software engineers choosing AI startups over conventional career paths. The rapidly evolving global AI landscape continues to attract talent seeking innovation and research opportunities.



