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Invisible Technologies Agrees to Acquire WeCP to Strengthen Expert Validation for High-Precision AI Workflows

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Invisible Technologies Agrees to Acquire WeCP to Strengthen Expert Validation for High-Precision AI Workflows
News

News

Invisible Technologies Agrees to Acquire WeCP to Strengthen Expert Validation for High-Precision AI Workflows

2026-03-10 22:47 Last Updated At:23:00

SAN FRANCISCO & BENGALURU, India--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 10, 2026--

Invisible Technologies today announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire WeCP, an AI-native technical assessment and intelligence platform known for its rigorously validated evaluation frameworks.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260310738939/en/

As AI systems are deployed across engineering, healthcare, finance, and other complex domains, the quality of the experts shaping those systems has become increasingly critical. High-stakes AI workflows require structured, high-fidelity validation of domain specialists at scale.

WeCP brings an AI-native assessment and intelligence platform, which to date has created over two million real-world technical interviews and more than 18,000 targeted domain and role-specific assessment frameworks across engineering, banking, healthcare, finance, and advanced STEM domains. It also has enhanced infrastructure for RL gyms and task simulation. Built over five years of continuous iteration, the platform enables precise evaluation of advanced technical talent.

“This acquisition expands our foundation of high-precision AI training,” said Matt Fitzpatrick, CEO of Invisible Technologies. “The performance of advanced AI systems depends on trusted human expertise, and WeCP’s assessment engine has built one of the most extensively refined technical assessment libraries in the market. By integrating WeCP into Invisible’s AI training platform, Meridial, we’re raising the bar on precision and speed for expert evaluation across our platform while also accelerating our capabilities in RL gyms and simulated environments.”

WeCP was founded by NIT Trichy alumni Abhishek Kaushik, formerly of Google, and Mohit Goyal, formerly of Meta, with a vision to modernize technical evaluation. What started as an effort to improve interview question generation evolved into a comprehensive system for measuring real-world skill, reasoning, and domain expertise. Kaushik and Goyal will join Invisible along with several key members of the WeCP team and continue working on their core mission to advance expert assessment infrastructure.

“We built WeCP to solve a fundamental challenge: traditional talent vetting does not scale for high-impact, high-precision work,” said Abhishek Kaushik, CEO and Co-founder of WeCP. “Joining Invisible allows us to extend our assessment frameworks into advanced AI training environments where rigor and accuracy are essential.”

About Invisible Technologies

Invisible Technologies is building the platform that makes AI work. It adapts models to each business and adds human expertise when needed — the same approach used to improve models for over 80% of the world’s top AI companies, including Microsoft, AWS, and Cohere. Invisible works across industries — from supply chain automation for Swiss Gear, to AI-enabled naval simulations with SAIC, and validating NBA draft picks for the Charlotte Hornets. Profitable for over half a decade, was ranked #2 fastest-growing AI company in 2024, and recently raised $100M to advance its platform technology.

About WeCP

Founded in India by Abhishek Kaushik and Mohit Goyal, alumni of NIT Trichy, WeCP is an AI-native technical assessment platform that designs structured, validated evaluation frameworks to measure real-world expertise across engineering, data science, machine learning, cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, finance, and advanced STEM roles.

Invisible Technologies today announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire WeCP

Invisible Technologies today announced it has entered into an agreement to acquire WeCP

DEATH VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — Death Valley, known as the driest place in North America, is teeming with life with a once-in-a-decade blossoming of wildflowers known as a superbloom, transforming a normally brown desert landscape into carpets of gold.

Wildflowers bloom across parts of southern California and Nevada at different degrees usually every year. In some years, superblooms are so vibrant they can be seen from space. But it's rare for Death Valley National Park, the hottest place on Earth, to burst with color.

“This landscape that sometimes people think of as desolate or devoid of life is coming alive right now with this really beautiful palette of colors,” said park ranger Matthew Lamar.

This year’s bloom is the best the park has seen since 2016 thanks to steady rainfall and warm temperatures in the last six months, Lamar said.

Death Valley received nearly a year’s worth of rain since October and experienced the wettest November on record, according to the National Park Service, with 1.76 inches (4.47 centimeters) of rain, allowing long-dormant seeds buried in the soil to burst through the surface.

Known as the “desert sunflower,” the desert gold flower blankets areas of the valley, with purple phacelia, brown-eyed primrose and the pink desert five-spot sprinkled throughout.

Just north of the Furnace Creek Visitor Center, Las Vegas resident Jackie Gilbert appreciated the contrast between the field of gold flowers with the mountains behind it and the blue sky above. She said the flowers' resilience is amazing.

“It’s a good reminder that even in the face of all this adversity, that they can still thrive,” said Gilbert, who visited specifically to see the superbloom.

Ecologists say the superbloom disproves a misconception about deserts: that there’s no life. Even in years without vibrant blooms, a lot of life happens in Death Valley, said Loralee Larios, plant ecologist at the University of California, Riverside.

“The plants and the animals have developed really amazing strategies to be able to persist, and especially in a system like Death Valley that’s really sort of characterized by extremes,” Larios said.

Tiffany Pereira, ecologist and associate research scientist at the Desert Research Institute, said desert plants have adapted to go decades without water, waiting for the perfect conditions for its seeds to germinate and spring to life.

Time is of the essence to see these ephemeral, or short-lived, wildflowers.

The fields of flowers on the park's lower elevations are expected to remain until mid-to-late March, depending on the weather. Higher elevations will blossom with color April through June, according to the National Park Service.

Visitors can check a poster outside of the visitor center for the best spots to view the flowers. In early March, fields of wildflowers are blooming just north of the visitor center, as well as south along Badwater Road. Ashford Mill, an hour’s drive from the visitor center, is also bursting with color, according to Lamar.

Ecologists and the park rangers caution visitors to stick to designated trails and avoid trampling on the flowers. Picking the flowers is prohibited, and touching the purple phacelia could cause skin irritation. Any flower plucked from the ground means fewer seeds planted for future generations to enjoy, Pereira said.

Visitors should also watch their step for the sphinx moth caterpillars, which are scattered across the desert floor in search of the brown-eyed primrose to eat before it buries itself into the soil and transforms into a moth.

“I think it’s a great time to come to Death Valley and have that unique experience because who knows when the next one will happen?” Lamar said.

A person looks closely in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person looks closely in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person stands in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person stands in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person takes pictures of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person takes pictures of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person takes pictures of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person takes pictures of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person walks in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

A person walks in a field of wildflowers during a superbloom, Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Death Valley National Park, Calif. (AP Photo/John Locher)

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