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Cognition acquires Windsurf, bringing powerful IDE to AI agent Devin

Cognition’s acquisition of Windsurf brings its agentic IDE under the same roof as Devin, creating one of the most powerful AI software engineering stacks to date.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 14, 2025, 10:00 PM EDT
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Windsurf CEO Jeff Wang and Cognition CEO Scott Wu.
Image: Cognition
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Just days after Google successfully scooped up several of its top minds, AI coding‑editor startup Windsurf has agreed to be acquired by Cognition, the firm behind Devin—the world’s first autonomous software‑engineering agent. The deal, officially announced on July 14, 2025, promises to meld Windsurf’s agentic IDE and IP with Cognition’s cutting‑edge agent, supercharging a new chapter of AI‑driven coding innovation.

Only a few months ago, Windsurf was at the center of one of the most dramatic talent‑and‑tech scrambles in Silicon Valley history. In May, OpenAI struck a deal to buy Windsurf for a reported $3 billion—but the acquisition stalled when Microsoft, OpenAI’s key investor and GitHub Copilot partner, refused to waive IP rights for a direct competitor to its own coding assistant.

Seizing the moment, Google orchestrated what insiders call a “reverse acquihire,” paying $2.4 billion for a non‑exclusive license to Windsurf’s core technology while luring CEO Varun Mohan, co‑founder Douglas Chen, and much of the R&D squad onto its AI team. That maneuver left Windsurf intact but stripped of much of its leadership, setting the stage for Cognition’s bid.

According to Cognition’s blog, the definitive agreement brings Windsurf’s entire IP, product roadmap, and remaining teams under Cognition’s banner, initially operating as an independent unit before deeper integration with Devin begins. Although the purchase price wasn’t disclosed, industry analysts view it as highly favorable for employees: vesting schedules will accelerate, ensuring that those who stayed behind share in the upside they helped create.

Windsurf’s interim CEO Jeff Wang praised the match in a message to staff:

Among all the teams in the AI space, Cognition was the one we’ve respected most—and they’re the perfect partner to take Windsurf into its next phase. Devin is already powering production‑grade code for some of the world’s largest companies, and their revenue growth has been nothing short of phenomenal.

Cognition CEO Scott Wu echoed that enthusiasm, noting that integrating an agentic IDE with an autonomous coding agent represents “the next frontier” of software development.

Windsurf’s standalone IDE collected developer‑level usage data—everything from keystroke patterns to in‑editor behavior—that’s gold for fine‑tuning AI models. As publicly available code repositories become saturated, these granular telemetry streams are seen as the next vital training ground for AI coding assistants.

Moreover, the sequence of events—from OpenAI’s blocked deal to Google’s strategic license-and‑hire to Cognition’s asset purchase—highlights a new, multi‑pronged M&A playbook in the AI era. Giants and nimble startups alike are deploying hybrids of talent poaching, IP licensing, and targeted asset buys to circumvent traditional antitrust scrutiny while still securing competitive advantage.

For Windsurf investors, the $2.4 billion license paid by Google offered handsome liquidity, while the acquisition by Cognition ensures the product and business they backed will continue to flourish under a team committed to deep integration with autonomous agents. Employees who weathered the storm can finally look forward to a tangible stake in the company’s success.

With Cognition’s backing, Windsurf’s IDE features—intelligent code suggestions, real‑time error detection, and seamless CI/CD orchestration—are set to become even more powerful when paired with Devin’s autonomous pull‑request generation and proactive refactoring capabilities. Early adopters at Fortune 500 companies can expect tighter workflows: imagine submitting a code review and having Devin not only catch bugs but also propose optimized fixes directly in the IDE.

Beyond product roadmaps, the Windsurf saga itself may catalyze regulatory attention. Lawmakers and antitrust enforcers are already scrutinizing “reverse acquihires” and IP‑only deals for their potential to hoard talent and stifle competition without triggering formal merger reviews.

For now, developers and enterprise IT teams have every reason to look forward to the next wave of AI‑driven coding tools—one that blends the best of agentic interfaces and autonomous engineering. And as Windsurf settles into life at Cognition, the industry will be watching to see just how far this partnership can push the boundaries of what code‑writing machines can achieve.


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