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Friday, January 3, 2014
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spredfast

Social marketing company Spredfast is announcing that it has raised $32.5 million in Series D funding.


The round was led by Lead Edge Capital with participation from Austin Ventures, InterWest Partners, and OpenView Partners. The company has now raised more than $60 million.


Spredfast was founded back in 2008, and CEO Rod Favaron acknowledged that the social media landscape has changed dramatically since then. He said the first group of products was focused on social media “listening” and aggregating comments about a company. The second wave consisted of social publishing tools and agencies like Buddy Media and Vitrue, which were “acquired en masse.”


Favaron argued that Spredfast is really part of a third wave: “The whole time, what we’ve been focused on, we don’t think social is about building another web page for your company. It’s about having conversations with people who care about your brand.” For Spredfast, among other things, that means building a product that allows a larger group of people across the entire company to get involved in social media efforts, rather than a small, isolated team. (Features include audience targeting, social filters, shared calendars, and integration with other products for web analytics, social listening, ad optimization, and more.)


The company says it works with more then 300 brands including General Mills, AT&T, and REI. The average customer has nearly 120 employees who are managing the social presence of “40 brands or initiatives across 200 accounts.” In addition to continued product development, Favaron said his goals for 2014 include international growth — he said that while Spredfast has customers in more than 20 companies, the team is entirely US-based, and that’s going to change.


Favaron also suggested that the social marketing industry still has a lot of room to grow, and it sounds like he wants to keep Spredfast as an independent company to take advantage of that growth.


“We wouldn’t go raise if we were thinking short term,” he said. “We’re obviously thinking long term.”







4:24 AM

Social marketing company Spredfast is announcing that it has raised $32.5 million in Series D funding. The round was led by Lead Edge Capit...

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Haloband product

The rise of mobile has given me so much: 24/7 connections with friends around the world, information exactly when I need it, the ability to track my fitness and health goals. Unfortunately, it’s also given me a complex about my giant sausage fingers and their constant inability to navigate the tiny keys on my smartphone’s slippery touchscreen. Sometimes I think I should have just bought a BlackBerry.


When I read about Haloband on their Kickstarter page, I felt like the Shanghai-based startup was speaking directly to me: “Everyone has trouble in locking and unlocking smartphones. The frequency usually hurts phones’ screen and keys, as well as our hearts. So we decided it’s time to do something.”


Haloband is a silicone wristband that is embedded with NFC chip and lets you operate your choice of functions by tapping your Android smartphone on your wrist. It’s also linked to a cloud account, which lets you save your ID as well as information you can send to other mobile devices. After setting up your wristband with the Haloband app, you can use it to unlock your phone, take photos or send emergency alerts, among other options. To get an idea of what Haloband can do, watch their hilarious Kickstarter video embedded above (“I’m from the future. If you scan my wrist, you can get my business card information. This is my information, from my wrist, on your phone. Because I’m from the future.”)

Haloband Tap

The project has already raised almost double its $10,000 goal on Kickstarter and its early bird specials are closed, but you can still select from several options, starting from just $25 for a black or white Haloband. Funding closes on Jan. 16 and the bands are scheduled to ship in February.


Haloband was developed by a Shanghai-based team that includes a former Intel engineer and focuses on NFC technology. They plan to release an open API so other developers can create their own Haloband apps and help smartphone users wrist easy (rimshot).







1:40 AM

The rise of mobile has given me so much: 24/7 connections with friends around the world, information exactly when I need it, the ability to...

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Thursday, January 2, 2014
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The first shipping bitcoin ATM, Robocoin, is landing in Hong Kong and Taiwan as the company expands its reach this January. They are planning further releases in Europe, Canada, and the US but, given Asia’s clout in the BTC markets, this is definitely an interesting development. The first Robocoin landed in Vancouver where it’s been a big hit and we wanted to see how things have been going for the company since launch in October.


“Bitcoin demand in Asia is amazing,” said Robocoin CEO Jordan Kelley. “We have many Asian countries seeking to enhance consumer capability to buy and sell bitcoin securely and safely.” I asked Robocoin’s Growth guru, Sam Glaser, to talk to us a little bit about the company and plans for the future.




TC: So ATMs, huh? How’s that working out?

Sam Glaser: The world seems to pretty excited. We sold over 50 machines within the first 50 days of accepting orders. Since we launched on October 29th in Vancouver we’ve had over 1900 people and companies around the world inquire to purchase. Robocoin ATM’s are the best in the game; they provide individuals the easiest way to buy and sell bitcoin while simultaneously providing operators the most exciting business opportunity in all of bitcoin–our operators in Vancouver broke even in two weeks.


TC: Tell me about yourselves.

SG: We are a small team of hungry, dedicated and determined technologists based in Las Vegas. Our team of 4: Jordan Kelley is CEO, John Russell is CTO, Chris Yoder (previously CTO @Cloudsnap) is our other developer and I’m our Chief of Growth. Our team is laser focused on proliferating Robocoin around the globe and providing an onramp for bitcoin overall.


TC: What are your numbers in Vancouver?
SG: It took us 29 days to surpass $1mm CAD in transactions from 1576 transactions. 52% of Robocoin customers are first time bitcoin users using our “generate wallet” feature. The numbers have actually been accelerating.


TC: How do you maintain a supply of BTC? Who is your provider?
SG: Operators connect their digital currency exchange (Bitstamp) account with their Robocoin Operator Dashboard. The Robocoin software uses those account credentials to perform all of the necessary tasks in real time. Our patent pending technology integrates with digital currency exchanges, such as Bitstamp, MtGox, BTC China, etc and facilitates trades for customers while giving the operator of the machine full control over the process.


TC: What have people been saying about the ATMs?
Those familiar with Bitcoin have long lamented the historically arduous exchange process and are delighted by Robocoin’s ease-of-exchange.


TC: Why not put one in Manhattan?

SG: En route! Announcement coming soon.


TC: So soon. Is it secure?
SG: Robocoin was built from the ground up to be 100% compliant globally and secure. Our 3-step verification gives operators unprecedented visibility of their customers and Robocoin software provides incredible power to defend against money laundering. The palm vein scanner + the ID scanner + facial matching is replacing the need for a bank teller. On the security side, the kiosks connect to our infrastructure through a VPN connection. The servers are not publicly accessible from the internet which minimizes the attack service. The computer itself sits in the safe so physical attacks are minimized.


TC: Can you install one in the bar around the corner from me in Brooklyn?
SG: Want to be the owner? Find a partner with a money transmitter license and you can help us grow the brand.


TC: Let’s hold off for now but I’ll ask around.







4:09 PM

The first shipping bitcoin ATM, Robocoin , is landing in Hong Kong and Taiwan as the company expands its reach this January. They are planni...

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The National Security Agency wants to build a futuristic super computer that can break most types of encryption, according to documents obtained from Edward Snowden by the Washington Post. No reason to worry yet, however, as the Agency is not even close to figuring out how to build the space-age technology necessary to crack most security procedures.


According to the documents, the computer project is part of a $79.7 million research program, “Penetrating Hard Targets”, suspected to be under classified contracts in a lab in College Park, Maryland.


Encryption, has, since at least the Ancient Greeks, been a method of scrambling information with the noise of arbitrary character strings; only someone with a rubric could determine what is the noise and what is the message. The more noise, or bits, the more difficult it is to crack the code by trial and error. A 1,024-bit encryption could take years (or much longer) to decode.


Quantum mechanics exploits the rather unintuitive concept that matter can exist in multiple states. Quantum computers could calculate problems where bits are both a 1 and 0, or multiple 1s and 0s, potentially increasing the speed of calculations exponentially.


Potentially then, the NSA could build a computer that could decode the most advanced encryption much faster.


Generally speaking, allowing even one organization to have the capability to break encryption is potentially threatening to all security on the web. Though, advances in quantum computing could also have benefits to science and health. So, at this point, the benefits and harms are pretty theoretical.


Either way, according to The Washington Post, such computers are extremely fragile and the NSA is close to only a few of the basic building blocks. “That’s a great step, but it’s a pretty small step on the road to building a large-scale quantum computer,” explained MIT mechanical engineer, Lloyd Seth.


This is why the NSA is also pressuring and paying security experts to create backdoors and exploits.


Read The Post’s full story here.


[Image Credit: Flickr User elsamuko]







3:13 PM

The National Security Agency wants to build a futuristic super computer that can break most types of encryption, according to documents obt...

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Here we go. Another year, another CES. And, as I said before, this is going to be a weird one. Nothing – and I mean nothing – has leaked out of the deep mountain hordes of Sony, LG, and Samsung and there is no overarching concept or topic that everyone is pushing. It’s as if the big guys are now just going through the motions. And they are.


Name one piece of popular non-cellphone/tablet CE hardware made by a major company that garnered any attention this year. Except for some Galaxy and iPhone/iPad refreshes, I can’t think of any. There are no new optical or media formats, no new improvements to home theatre devices, and apart from Sonos no one is doing anything exciting in the living room space.


The heyday of CES came when hardware was hard. Now hardware is easy and selling hardware is even easier. Thanks to crowdfunding and powerful, well-connected accelerators, a whole new world has opened up to the lone inventor or small group – a world that eschews most of what CES stands for.


There is one real bricks and mortar retailer left, Best Buy, and thousands of struggling Mom and Pop stores and chains that are just scraping by. None of these retail spaces want much to do with some crazy brain for DIY robots or an Arduino board/Raspberry Pi mash-up. That used to be RadioShack’s territory before they gave up. There is no place for the hardware that really excites us anymore at CES, although, by creating little pavilions of all sorts, the CEA is trying to cash in on crowdfunding trends.


So CES may have finally reached the doldrums. Iteration after iteration of speakers, receivers, and Blu-ray players are approximately as interesting to the average technophile as a stack of old Crutchfield catalogs. More PCs in weird cases, more 4K TVs, more massive booths offering little in the way of novelty and plenty in the way of overkill.


“But John,” you grunt into your keyboard. “Why are you even going?”


Because the concept of CES is far nobler than the reality. CES is the one time when everyone comes together. The makers, the builders, and the doers rub shoulders with the R&D dudes and the PR reps. The investors talk to the biz dev guys, the buyers meet the startups and, thanks to a bit of synchronicity and a lot of booze, a lot of stuff gets done at CES. Our own event, Hardware Battlefield, is a testament to the still-beguiling draw of CES as a place to get things done.


Every generation murders the gods of the last. For decades CES has been the show of shows, full of glitz, glamor, and nerds. The nerds are still there, the glitz is still flowing, but the creative force that made shows like CES, CEBIT, Comdex, and the like so vital is being sapped by the vitality of the Internet. Why do you need to meet with buyers when they’re an email away? Sure, this is face-to-face business for many but for an increasing numbers spending a numbing week in the Nevada desert is a prison sentence.


Although CES is all about the show floor, the real action happens in the shadows. That’s why we’re there, that’s why you’ll stay interested, and that’s why this creaking old ship is still sailing, years after she should have sunk.


CES 2014







2:40 PM

Here we go. Another year, another CES. And, as I said before , this is going to be a weird one. Nothing – and I mean nothing – has leaked ou...

Read more »
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integral ad science

Integral Ad Science, a company that evaluates the quality of ad placements, has raised $30 million in Series D funding.


The funding was first disclosed in a regulatory filing and has been confirmed by CEO Scott Knoll, who said the round was led by August Capital (with existing investors participating). August’s Eric Carlborg is joining the Integral board.


The company started out as AdSafe but took on its current name in 2012 as part of a rebranding effort away from ad verification (i.e., confirming that an ad ran on the intended site and reached the intended audience) and towards “media valuation” (helping advertisers find and buy high-quality impressions).


To do that, Integral offers a “TRAQ Score”, which incorporates things like brand safety, page content, and ad viewability into a single metric. Knoll also said that one of the company’s big advantages is the fact that it works with customers on both the “buy side” and the “sell side”, and that programmatic buying (where ads are bought in an automated, real-time fashion) is making up a growing part of the business.


He added that the company didn’t need to raise the funding (it last raised a $10 million Series C in 2012), but he said, “It’s always like a good time to raise, especially if you don’t have to.”


Knoll’s goals for 2014 include global growth and incorporating different types of advertising. Integral has been largely focused on display ads, and it recently added video. As Integral introduces more ad channels, Knoll said it will become more essential because its machine learning algorithms will improve, it can provide “a more holistic picture of what’s happening.”







2:40 PM

Integral Ad Science , a company that evaluates the quality of ad placements, has raised $30 million in Series D funding. The funding was fir...

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shopifymobile

Ottawa-based ecommerce player Shopify introduced a totally redesigned version of its iOS mobile app today, with a new core concept that focuses on helping merchants do more to manage and run their stores from their devices. And in keeping with their new strategy post-gigantic raise, the company is looking to help both online and offline retailers in one package with the new app.


The new app comes with payment powers, so that you can use Shopify’s free, Square-like reader to collect funds from customers and complete sales in person. It’s restricted to U.S. merchants only for now, but the company says more regions will gain access to the device later on. Along with that, there’s also total store management for online Shopify clients, and management of Shopify POS, too, for customers who are also using their brick-and-mortar sales solution.


credit-card-readerNew for online merchants are notifications of each new order as they come in, as well as the ability to dispatch shipping notifications, and total control over inventory management so that you can snap product photos with your iPhone, delete old ones and more. The Shopify POS companion features let you make changes to your inventory and pricing, too, and with the help of the card reader, it doubles as another register in addition to the existing iPad-based software.


Shopify obviously isn’t resting on its laurels after its big raise and valuation of $1 billion, both announced at the end of 2013. This is its first product launch of 2014, but it definitely won’t be the last, the company says.







1:40 PM

Ottawa-based ecommerce player Shopify introduced a totally redesigned version of its iOS mobile app today , with a new core concept that foc...

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