Tran VC Content Team

Tran.vc is a small investment fund that gives $50,000 to early-stage startups using AI, software, or robotics in the form of intellectual property rights services. They help technical founders build strong ideas and grow their businesses without needing a lot of outside money. Their team also offers advice, connections, and support to help these startups succeed. The content team at Tran.vc writes with the same intensity and craftsmanship that define the founders they back. Composed of former entrepreneurs, engineers, patent strategists, and operators, the team approaches every piece as a build—starting from first principles, digging into technical depth, and shaping narratives that are as useful as they are clear. They don’t publish quickly or casually; each article is the result of days or weeks of research, interviews with domain experts, countless rewrites, and a ruthless filter for originality and precision.

Model Cards and System Cards for Real-World Compliance

Most founders I meet are not trying to “move fast and break things.” They are trying to ship something real—into hospitals, factories, banks, schools, or government systems—without getting blocked by legal, security, or trust reviews. That is where model cards and system cards earn their keep. Think of them as the plain-language “truth document” for

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Bias Testing That Regulators and Buyers Expect

Bias testing used to be something teams talked about “later.” After launch. After growth. After the first big customer. That is not how it works anymore. If you build AI that touches hiring, lending, insurance, health, education, safety, public services, or even basic customer support, people will ask the same hard question early: “How do

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Side Letters in Global Deals: When to Avoid Them

Side letters show up in cross-border deals when one side wants something “extra” that is not in the main contract. Sometimes that “extra” is harmless, like a small process note. But in global deals—where laws, cultures, time zones, languages, and regulators collide—side letters can quietly become the most dangerous pages you sign. This matters a

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Cross-Border Term Sheets: Clauses That Get Messy

When you raise money across borders, the term sheet stops being a “simple” deal summary and starts becoming a translation project. Not just language. Legal systems. Tax rules. Currency movement. How courts work. How fast you can enforce a contract. Even what a “share” really means in that country. And here’s the hard truth: most

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