Tech
3 days left: Save up to $680 on your TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 ticket
Time is running out! Just 3 days left before Super Early Bird pricing ends on February 27 at 11:59 p.m. PT. This is your last chance to secure the lowest ticket rates for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026. If 2026 is your year to fundraise, hire, scale, or launch, you cannot afford to miss it.
Lock in your pass now before prices jump. This is the moment to act.

What to expect at Disrupt 2026
From October 13–15 at Moscone West in San Francisco, 10,000+ founders, operators, and investors gather for three days of high-signal conversations, deal-making, and actionable insights. Disrupt is not just content — it’s access to accelerated growth.
You don’t attend Disrupt to sit in the audience. You go to gain leverage. Every session, every conversation, and every connection is designed to accelerate your growth and compound your momentum. You’ll get:
- Tactical insights from operators actively building in today’s market.
- Direct conversations with investors writing checks.
- Exposure to emerging startups before the rest of the market catches up.
- Curated networking designed to produce real outcomes.

Unparalleled, improved networking opportunities
Last year, more than 20,000 curated meetings took place on-site. In 2026, upgraded tools will make those connections even more targeted and efficient. One conversation can change your trajectory — and at Disrupt, that is the point.
Valuable takeaways straight from the tech and VC leaders who’ve shaped the ecosystem
Disrupt has long been the stage for founders and investors who define eras. Past speakers have included category-defining leaders and top-tier VCs, such as:

In 2025, Disrupt featured 200+ onstage conversations with 250+ tech and VC leaders across AI, hardware, space, startup growth, and venture. Expect the same high-caliber content this year and check the event page as the 2026 agenda rolls out.
Techcrunch event
Boston, MA
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June 9, 2026
Startup Battlefield 200: Pitch to win
Startup Battlefield returns with 200 pre-Series A companies competing for $100,000 in equity-free funding, global visibility, and direct investor access. Alumni include Discord, Cloudflare, and Trello.
If you want to see what’s next and hear directly from top VCs on scaling a viable startup, the Disrupt Stage is where it happens first.
Discover the next breakout innovation
With 300+ startup exhibitors, the venue, especially the Expo Hall, is where deal flow and discovery collide. You won’t just observe trends; you’ll see them before they scale. You’ll be able to:
- Explore new tech stacks and tools for your startup.
- Identify your next career move, operator, or investor.
- Network in a sea of founders, investors, and innovators.

Extend your connections with “Disrupt Week”
From October 11 to 17, Disrupt Side Events take place across the Bay Area, including breakfasts, cocktail hours, panels, and founder meetups that extend the connections beyond the main stage. The main event is powerful. The surrounding ecosystem makes it even stronger.
Only 3 days left — lock in massive ticket savings now
Super Early Bird pricing ends this Friday, February 27, at 11:59 p.m. PT. If you want to be in the room where capital moves, companies scale, and ideas turn into breakthroughs, now is the time to lock in your discounted ticket.
Register now before it’s too late. Save up to $680 on your individual pass, or up to 30% on group passes.

Tech
Welcome to the post-hype crypto market
Crypto is creeping back into the startup conversation, but at ETHDenver last week, the buzz was as much about Washington as it was about tokens. Policy shifts are rippling through the market as Tether and stablecoins face scrutiny, players like Stripe re-enter the conversation, and startups either find traction or flame out. The hype cycle is over, or at least taking a break. So what comes next?
On this episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Rebecca Bellan sits down with Jacquelyn Melinek, CEO of Token Relations and host of the Talking Tokens and Crypto in America podcasts, to make sense of how the market has changed and what in the world of crypto is built to last.
Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.
Tech
US cybersecurity agency CISA reportedly in dire shape amid Trump cuts and layoffs
U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA is reportedly in dire shape, according to bipartisan lawmakers and industry leaders who fear that the agency’s ability to perform its core mission has been diminished and left it unprepared for a cybersecurity crisis.
News site Cyberscoop’s Tim Starks spoke with sources across Congress, the private cyber industry, and beyond, and what came back reflected a general consensus that CISA has suffered under cuts and layoffs during the Trump administration’s first year.
Over that time, CISA has lost around one-third of its staff, which cost it programs, personnel, and expertise, including the agency’s counter-ransomware initiative and efforts to promote secure software development. Some of these have included several members of its election security team, TechCrunch reported last year. CISA is the federal agency responsible for election security. Some warned that Trump’s ongoing obsession with promoting false claims about the 2020 election has led to the administration deprioritizing CISA.
CISA also reassigned hundreds of other staffers to aid other agencies within the Department of Homeland Security as part of the Trump administration’s broad immigration crackdown.
Many of Cyberscoop’s sources blame the Trump administration, Congress, or both. Others singled out CISA’s acting director, Madhu Gottumukkala, as having struggled to lead the agency and reportedly caused security headaches as a result.
CISA has been without a permanent director since Trump entered office in 2025.
The cybersecurity agency is said to be currently operating at around 38% staff levels as the partial U.S. federal government shutdown, which began on February 14, drags on. Lawmakers have declined to continue funding federal immigration authorities amid widespread criticism following the killing of two U.S. citizens by federal agents.
Techcrunch event
Boston, MA
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June 9, 2026
When reached for comment, CISA’s Gottumukkala told TechCrunch that the agency “remains unwavering in its commitment to protect our federal networks from malicious cyber threat actors despite the multi-week government shutdown” of Homeland Security.
Tech
The White House wants AI companies to cover rate hikes. Most have already said they would.
The proliferation of AI data centers plugging into the national electrical grid has helped increase consumer electricity prices, driving up the average national electricity price by more than 6% in the last year.
That’s not a good look for the incumbents ahead of this fall’s elections, and President Donald Trump addressed the challenge in his State of the Union speech last night.
“We’re telling the major tech companies that they have the obligation to provide for their own power needs,” Trump said. “They can build their own power plants as part of their factory, so that no one’s prices will go up.”
The hyperscalers in question don’t need to be told. They have already made public commitments in recent weeks to cover electricity costs by building their own power sources, paying higher rates, or both, part of a broader effort to solve PR problems around data center expansion and win over skeptical communities.
On January 11, Microsoft announced its policy “to ensure that the electricity cost of serving our datacenters is not passed on to residential customers.” On January 26, OpenAI committed to “paying its own way on energy, so that our operations don’t increase your energy prices.” On February 11, Anthropic made the same pledge to “cover electricity price increases that consumers face from our data centers.” Yesterday, Google announced the largest battery project in the world to support a data center in Minnesota.
What these commitments mean in practice, and who will determine which data centers are responsible for which price increases, remains unknown. The White House has not released the text of the proposed pledge.
“A handshake agreement with Big Tech over data center costs isn’t good enough,” Arizona Democratic Senator Mark Kelly said on social media. “Americans need a guarantee that energy prices won’t soar and communities have a say.”
Techcrunch event
Boston, MA
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June 9, 2026
White House spokesperson Taylor Rodgers said that next week, companies will send representatives to formally sign the pledge at the White House. Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, xAI, Oracle, and OpenAI are reportedly among those set to attend. However, none of the companies have confirmed their attendance.
Even if tech companies commit to taking on electricity costs, on-site power plants may not be a panacea — they can still have adverse impacts on the surrounding environment, and will stress supply chains for natural gas, turbines, photovoltaics, and batteries, depending on how companies aim to power their compute.
