# Patronus AI 获 5000 万美元 B 轮融资，构建"数字世界"压力测试 AI 智能体

- 来源：TechCrunch：AI（RSS）
- 作者：Marina Temkin
- 发布时间：2026-06-26 04:19
- AIHOT 分数：56
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmqtys0hd001cslayvtoudxk5
- 原文链接：https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/25/patronus-ai-lands-50m-to-build-digital-worlds-that-stress-test-ai-agents

## AI 摘要

Patronus AI 宣布完成 5000 万美元 B 轮融资，由 Greenfield Partners 领投，Notable Capital、Lightspeed、Datadog 和 Samsung 参投，累计融资达 7000 万美元。该公司由前 Meta AI 研究员于 2023 年创立，利用“数字世界模型”创建网站和内部系统的模拟副本，通过强化学习对 AI 智能体进行压力测试，迭代奖励成功并惩罚错误。目前服务覆盖软件工程和金融领域，几乎所有前沿 AI 实验室和初创公司均为客户，过去一年收入增长 15 倍。

## 正文

AI agents are becoming more sophisticated. They are evolving from answering questions to autonomously executing multi-step complex tasks.

But before these agents can be trusted to book trips or conduct financial analysis on behalf of users, model providers and the startups building such agents want to ensure that they perform reliably across a vast range of scenarios.

AI labs often use benchmarks to show off their model’s prowess, but a high score, even on an agent-oriented benchmark, doesn’t actually prove that an AI can accomplish various complex, real-world jobs correctly.

Patronus AI, a startup founded in 2023 by former Meta AI researchers Anand Kannappan and Rebecca Qian, is helping model makers and companies fine-tune models to do just that by building simulated digital environments in which to evaluate the agents’ performance.

The San Francisco-based startup must be solving an important problem. Virtually every frontier AI lab and many emerging startups are now customers, according to Glenn Solomon, a managing director at Notable Capital, who describes demand for the company’s simulated environments as nearly insatiable.

Patronus’ revenue has grown 15-fold over the past year, fueling significant investor interest. On Thursday, the company announced a $50 million Series B round led by Greenfield Partners, with participation from Notable Capital, Lightspeed, Datadog, and Samsung. The round brings the company’s total funding to $70 million.

Patronus uses what it calls “digital world models” to create replicas of websites and internal systems. In these environments, agents are stress-tested after training using reinforcement learning, which iteratively rewards successful task completion and penalizes errors.

AI labs see great value in these digital simulations because they give agents a chance to try different, sometimes unpredictable, scenarios. The company compares its approach to how Waymo trained autonomous cars by first building synthetic worlds to test vehicles against rare hazards, such as severe weather or a child running after a ball.

The difference with AI agents is that they tend to take shortcuts, which means they fail to complete the task correctly. “Patronus is really good at spotting the hacks and making sure they are holding the models accountable,” Solomon said.

Patronus is currently providing its simulated digital worlds for software engineering and finance, but these are just the start, according to Kannappan.

“Today we’re very focused on the problems that are verifiable, so the problems that you can immediately check and verify, but there are a ton more areas that are very non-verifiable or very hard to verify,” he said.

Just because these processes are verifiable doesn’t mean they are simple. “We want to be able to actually create the environment in which you can operate an agent that can run for 10 hours or 10 days or 10 weeks,” Kannappan said.

As for rivals, Patronus believes it is primarily competing against the internal teams AI labs have already built to evaluate agent behavior. While human-data firms like Mercor and Surge help model makers with reinforcement learning, Patronus operates differently by evaluating how agents behave without any human involvement.
