Loading organizations...

§ Private Profile · New York City, NY, USA
AI-powered open-source dependency management platform automating software dependency updates for development teams, using LLMs to manage.
Infield has raised $3.0M across 1 funding round.
Key people at Infield.
Infield was founded in 2019 by Steve Pike (Founder) and Allison Pike (Founder).
Infield has raised $3.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Infield is an AI-powered open-source dependency management platform that automates and simplifies software updates, based in New York, New York. The company utilizes large language models to analyze changelogs and identify breaking changes, enabling developers to safely upgrade packages while managing complex interdependencies. Offering both automated software tools and white-glove managed services, Infield's platform supports Ruby, JavaScript, TypeScript, and Python, and recently launched its "Upgrade Path" product for incremental updates. In January 2024, the company announced $3 million in seed funding led by Foundation Capital, with participation from Y Combinator and Firsthand Alliance. With fewer than 25 employees and less than $5 million in revenue, key investors include Adam Gross, Jonathan Siddarth, and Austin Ogilvie. Infield was founded in 2022 by Steve Pike, Allison Pike, and Andrew Lenehan.
Key people at Infield.
Infield has raised $3.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $3.0M Seed in January 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2024 | $3M Seed | Lauri Moore | Bond, Coinbase Ventures, ALI Tamaseb, Fusion Fund, Illuminate Financial Management, NEW North Ventures, Next Play Ventures, Operator Collective, Otherwise Fund, Pace Capital, SciFi VC, Vertex Ventures, Work Bench, BEN Silbermann, Sohila Zadran, TIM Kendall, Adam Gross, Austin Ogilvie 🗽, Jonathan Siddharth, Firsthand Alliance, Y Combinator | Announced |
Infield is a New York-based startup that builds a software platform to enable safer, faster upgrades of open source software dependencies. Its product automates the complex and error-prone process of reading changelogs, assessing risks, and upgrading packages, allowing software development teams to focus on shipping features rather than managing dependencies. Infield currently supports Ruby, JavaScript, TypeScript, and Python, with Java support coming soon. The company serves developer teams and organizations that rely heavily on open source libraries, solving the problem of dependency management by combining automation with expert developer support to reduce upgrade risks and effort. Infield has demonstrated growth momentum, recently raising a $3 million seed round led by Foundation Capital, with participation from Y Combinator and notable angel investors[1][2][3][5].
Infield was founded in 2019 by Allison and Steve Pike, a husband-and-wife team with complementary backgrounds. Allison has experience in high-frequency trading and operations leadership at SevenFifty, a B2B alcohol e-commerce platform, while Steve has a background in financial analysis and technology leadership, including being CTO at SevenFifty. Initially, they built Syndetic, a data marketplace, through Y Combinator in 2019 but pivoted in early 2022 to focus on open source dependency upgrades after Steve’s consulting work helping developers with upgrades revealed a market need. The pivot was motivated by their combined expertise in data pipelines and dependency management, aiming to make open source upgrades trivial and safer. Early traction included building a white-glove upgrade service alongside their software offering[1][2].
Infield rides the growing trend of automating software supply chain management and DevSecOps, addressing the increasing complexity and security risks of open source dependencies. As software projects grow, dependency management becomes a critical bottleneck and risk factor. The timing is favorable due to heightened awareness of software supply chain vulnerabilities and the widespread adoption of open source. Market forces such as the demand for faster release cycles and secure, reliable software delivery support Infield’s value proposition. By simplifying dependency upgrades, Infield helps improve software quality and security, influencing the broader ecosystem by enabling teams to adopt best practices in dependency hygiene without excessive manual effort[1][2][3].
Looking ahead, Infield is poised to expand language support (Java is upcoming) and scale its managed upgrade services. Trends shaping its journey include increasing regulatory scrutiny on software supply chains, growing enterprise adoption of DevSecOps tools, and the continued proliferation of open source software. Infield’s influence may evolve from a niche upgrade tool to a foundational platform for dependency risk management, potentially integrating deeper with CI/CD pipelines and security tooling. Its combination of automation and expert support positions it well to capture a growing market need for safer, faster, and more reliable dependency upgrades, reinforcing its mission to make open source software easier and safer to use[1][2][3][5].
Infield was founded in 2019 by Steve Pike (Founder) and Allison Pike (Founder).
Infield has raised $3.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Infield's investors include Lauri Moore, Bond, Coinbase Ventures, Ali Tamaseb, Fusion Fund, Illuminate Financial Management, New North Ventures, Next Play Ventures, Operator Collective, Otherwise Fund, Pace Capital, SciFi VC.