The latest from TechCrunch
- DataSift Raises $7.2M For Powerful Social Data Analysis And Business Intelligence Platform
- It's Finally Here: Spotify Launches Its Long-Awaited iPad App
- Flattr Finally Lands Big Dailymotion Deal, But Its Business Model Still Sucks
- Birst Lands $26M From Sequoia, Hummer Winblad To Bring Big Data Analytics To The Masses
- European VC Connect Ventures Launches With $22M Fund. Secret Sales Gets The First Helping: $487K
- Bing Strips Down Results Page To Make Google Look Like "Search Overload"
- Yuri Milner, Dave Morin, SV Angel, CrunchFund And More Hook Up Pair With $4.2M
- Salesforce Acquires YC-Backed Collaborative Text Editor Stypi
- TechCrunch/Gadget Weekly: Kids And Technology, Can A New Keyboard Save RIM
- Google Wins $35 Million U.S. Government Contract Over Microsoft
- OMGWHAT? GREE Acquires Mobile-Social Game Developer Funzio For $210M
- Castlight Lands A Whopping $100M D Round To Bring Transparency To Healthcare Costs
- Now BrandYourself Users Can See The Companies Googling Them
- AllClear ID Rolls Out First-Ever Social Security Number Blocking Service For Children's IDs
- Facebook Helps Third-Party Mobile Apps Grow Today…So It Can Monetize Their Content With Ads Tomorrow
- Foursquare Launches $10 Instant Verification Service For Businesses
- Kickstarter: These Nerdy Glasses Will Record Your Life
- Crowdfund A Needy Kid's Education With Conway-Backed Wishbone.org
- Keen On… Ted Morgan: Why Skyhook Has Become A Harvard Business School Case Study [TCTV]
- Microsoft Asks Windows Phone Developers To Keep The Quality Up And The Sex Down
| DataSift Raises $7.2M For Powerful Social Data Analysis And Business Intelligence Platform | Top |
DataSift, a data analysis company that provides developers and third parties with access to Twitter, Facebook and other social data sources, has raised $7.2 million in a follow-on Series A round from existing investors GRP Partners and IA Ventures. This brings DataSift's total funding to $15 million. For background, developers, businesses, media companies and organizations can essentially use DataSift to mine the Twitter firehose of social data, as well as Facebook, YouTube, blogs, forums and online message boards. But what makes DataSift special is that it can sort through billions of social interactions then filter this social media data for demographic information, online influence and sentiment, either positive or negative. | |
| It's Finally Here: Spotify Launches Its Long-Awaited iPad App | Top |
Today, Spotify is releasing its long-awaited iPad app -- finally giving Apple tablet users, who also have a Spotify Premium (paid) subscription, a native route to accessing its 17-million song catalog. It will be worth seeing whether pent-up demand for the app will translate into a rush of downloads and usage, in the same way that Spotify saw around its (also long-awaited) U.S. launch last year. On the back of that, the U.S. has become Spotify's fastest-growing market, with the company projected to make $889 million in revenues this year on a user base of 13 million people and counting. | |
| Flattr Finally Lands Big Dailymotion Deal, But Its Business Model Still Sucks | Top |
Flattr, a social micro-payments platform which we've likened to a "Like button with cash" is to partner with the second biggest video site on the Web, Dailymotion. The distribution deal is targeted at Dailymotion's key content creators in its Motionmakers category. A cynic might call this a mere test of the platform to see if it can be rolled out across the site more widely. But both parties insist this a card-carrying 'deal'. Suffice it to say Flattr has ben crying out for a big distribution partner and yearned after one for the last two years. But TechCrunch remains sceptical that even this deal will lift the startup out of the early adopter crowd into the mainstream as there remain significant issues with its business model. Then again, at least they now get a real stress test. | |
| Birst Lands $26M From Sequoia, Hummer Winblad To Bring Big Data Analytics To The Masses | Top |
Birst, a San Francisco-based startup that offers on-demand business intelligence and analytics solutions for companies big and small, has raised $26 million in series D financing, led by Sequoia Capital. Existing investors, including Hummer Winblad and DAG Ventures, also participated in the round, bringing Birst's total funding to $46 million. | |
| European VC Connect Ventures Launches With $22M Fund. Secret Sales Gets The First Helping: $487K | Top |
Make way for another VC firm in Europe: Today sees the launch of Connect Ventures, a new London based fund that will focus on seed and Series A stages in European tech companies. It's kicking off with a €16 million ($22 million) fund, which will be dispersed in investments of between €250,000 and €1.25 million ($330k-$1.7m). Led by co-founders Pietro Bezza and Bill Earner, Connect Ventures will be focused on early stage companies in the consumer web, digital media, e-commerce, entertainment and gaming sectors. The first recipient of money from the fund is the London-based private sales site SecretSales, which is getting a £300,000 ($487,000) investment on top of the £6.3 million ($10.2 million) round that it got in February from a consortium of investors that included Doughty Hanson, Pantech Ventures and others. | |
| Bing Strips Down Results Page To Make Google Look Like "Search Overload" | Top |
While Google keeps cramming its search results pages full of tools and social content, today Bing confirmed with me the full roll out a redesigned search results page that completely clears the left sidebar, and replaces the tabbed header with a cleaner set of links. Bing's Facebook integration is also more subtle now, instead of plastering names and faces beneath Liked results. This more relaxing, dare I say zen, design gives Google a more claustrophobic and exhausting feel by comparison. Microsoft seems to have realized that if it can't match Google's algorithmic prowess, it could win with sleek design that doesn't bombard you with a thousand options. Here's how the designs of two search engines compare... | |
| Yuri Milner, Dave Morin, SV Angel, CrunchFund And More Hook Up Pair With $4.2M | Top |
For a social network that's, for lack of a better term, monogamous, social network for couples Pair has just raised funding from so many high-profile investors I'm having trouble picking who to include in this headline, and seriously running out of the room. Investors in the company's recent $4.2 million seed round include Ashton Kutcher's A-Grade Ventures, Dave Morin, Paul Buchheit, Founder Collective, SV Angel, Lerer Ventures, Michael Birch, Sam Altman, CrunchFund, Tencent, Yuri Milner, Betaworks, Alexis Ohanian, Garry Tan, Harjeet Taggar, Gary Vaynerchuk, Brandee Barker, Brian Pokorny, Elad Gil, and Susan Wu. This sounds like it would be an amazing dinner party. | |
| Salesforce Acquires YC-Backed Collaborative Text Editor Stypi | Top |
It looks like the team from Y Combinator-backed Stypi is heading to Salesforce, according to this blog post. UPDATE: We've confirmed that Salesforce has acquired Stypi. Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. As we reported last year, Stypi develops lightweight, real-time collaborative text editor. It's similar in many ways to fellow YC alum Etherpad, which was acquired by Google. You can create documents in Stypi and edit it just as you would any other document, and you can invite new collaborators simply by sending them the URL. | |
| TechCrunch/Gadget Weekly: Kids And Technology, Can A New Keyboard Save RIM | Top |
The TechCrunch/Gadget Weekly is back with several new faces. Jordan and Chris join John and I for our first TC/G webcast in several months. In this week's episode we discuss our recent trip to RIM's Waterloo's HQ and also the perils of kids and interacting with seamless technology. | |
| Google Wins $35 Million U.S. Government Contract Over Microsoft | Top |
Google and its partner Onix Networking just won a $35 million contract to run the U.S. Department of the Interior's new cloud-based email and collaboration system. This wasn't always a sure bet for Google. In 2010, the Department of the Interior awarded Microsoft a $59.3 million contract to run its email and collaboration system. Google and its Ohio-based partner Onix Networking quickly filed a suit to block this contract. In Google's view, the Interior Department's procurement process unfairly favored Microsoft and never gave it a fair chance. Google finally withdrew its lawsuit last September after the Department scrapped its plans to use Microsoft's solution because its original decision was "now stale in light of new developments in technology and entrants into the market." | |
| OMGWHAT? GREE Acquires Mobile-Social Game Developer Funzio For $210M | Top |
Japanese gaming giant GREE just acquired mid-core, mobile game developer Funzio for $210 million in an all-cash deal that should boost its ability to build games for Western audiences. Funzio is behind Crime City, Modern War and Kingdom Age, which are graphical RPGs that have had more than 20 million downloads on Apple's iOS, Android or Facebook platforms. I had heard a few weeks back that Funzio was in a fundraising process at a $350 million post-money valuation and had also been loosely talking to various buyers in an auction-style process. Apparently, the fundraising efforts helped tip Funzio into a sale, but maybe not at the valuation I had originally heard about. Still, $210 million is not bad at all, considering that the company had raised about $20 million to date from IDG Ventures and Playdom co-founder Rick Thompson. For comparison, Draw Something-maker OMGPOP went to Zynga for $180 million in cash plus an undisclosed earnout. Why did GREE buy Funzio? GREE is a multi-billion dollar mobile gaming company from Japan that is trying to break into Western markets. Its profit margins put Zynga to shame, but the company is running out of room to grow as its home country becomes saturated. | |
| Castlight Lands A Whopping $100M D Round To Bring Transparency To Healthcare Costs | Top |
Founded in 2008, San Francisco-based Castlight has been at the forefront of the movement to bring price transparency and comparison tools to healthcare, offering a B2B service that enables self-insured businesses to provide their employees with the tools to compare costs and quality of a wide range of tests and procedures. While there was plenty of resistance from providers off the bat, the value of this price transparency has been more than apparent in the amount of funding Castlight has raised to date -- $81 million. Today, the startup is more than doubling its coffers, as it has announced the closing of a $100 million Series D financing. The round was led by two "major" (but unnamed) mutual funds, with contributions from T. Rowe Price, and Redmile Group. Castlight's previous investors include names like Morgan Stanley, Wellcom Trust, U.S. Venture Partners, Maverick Capital, Oak Investment Partners, Venrock, and more. | |
| Now BrandYourself Users Can See The Companies Googling Them | Top |
BrandYourself, a startup offering a cheap and easy approach to managing your Google results, has added a new feature to answer one of those burning questions: Who are the people Googling me? To be clear, it's not actually plugging in to Google and sending you an alert every single time someone enters your name. Instead, it's revealing data about who's visiting your BrandYourself profile page in a way that's probably more meaningful and comprehensible to your average consumer than, say, Google Analytics. So every time someone visits your profile, BrandYourself can tell you (either via your dashboard or an email alert) what city they're in, how they found you, and what company they work for. Co-founder and CEO Patrick Ambron compares the feature to the way LinkedIn and other social sites can alert you about other members who have viewed your profile, "except applied to the entire web." | |
| AllClear ID Rolls Out First-Ever Social Security Number Blocking Service For Children's IDs | Top |
ID and fraud protection service AllClear ID, is launching a new feature today which aims to protect kids' Social Security Numbers (SSNs) from being stolen and used to secure things like mortgages, loans and other big ticket items. It's a major problem, the company says, noting in a new study that 10.7% of children have had their ID stolen. The idea with the new service is to create the equivalent of the "Do Not Call" list for children's SSNs. Once on the list, if any criminal tries to use the kid's ID for any reason - even just a credit check - credit reporting agency TransUnion will immediately flag and block the ID's use. Oh, and the best part? It's free. | |
| Facebook Helps Third-Party Mobile Apps Grow Today…So It Can Monetize Their Content With Ads Tomorrow | Top |
The fundamental misunderstanding of Facebook's mobile prospects is that it's trying to compete with iOS and Android for in-app payment revenue via HTML5. It's not. What Facebook really wants is the content produced by apps on every platform, which it can monetize with ads. Payments revenue is a very nice bonus, but not critical. That's why Facebook announced today that it's making money on mobile for everyone else by pouring traffic into their apps. Facebook says it drove 160 million visitors and 1.1 billion visits to third-party apps last month, up from 60 million visitors and 320 million visits in February. And now seven of the top 10 grossing iOS apps and six of the top Android apps integrate it to power discovery and virality. By showing that it can drive traffic to mobile apps, devs will keep integrating Facebook and sending it news feed stories that the social network show ads next to. | |
| Foursquare Launches $10 Instant Verification Service For Businesses | Top |
Foursquare is enhancing its feature set for businesses today, with the introduction of a new verification service for merchants. The company says that for a one-time, $10 fee, owners and managers will now be able to instantly verify their business in order to start using Foursquare's business tools, which include the ability to offer specials, update the business listing, and access data about their customers and visitors. | |
| Kickstarter: These Nerdy Glasses Will Record Your Life | Top |
| While the use case for these glasses can quickly become quite dubious, the YouGen.tv glasses by Vergence Lab are pretty cool. Not only do they instantly change from sunglasses to clear Buddy-Holly-style specs they also record your life as it happens. Created by Jon Rodriguez and Erick Miller, the glasses will go for a $199 pledge (they'll retail for $299) and the creators expect these things to become more powerful over time by including HUD features in future versions. | |
| Crowdfund A Needy Kid's Education With Conway-Backed Wishbone.org | Top |
It's too common a story: smart, low-income kid can't find their academic passion, so they drop out of school. But now you can rewrite this tragic tale with the help of Wishbone.org, a philanthropy website launching today where you can crowdfund high-potential youngsters so they can afford inspiring after- and summer-school programs. Wishbone only accepts seriously motivated students and produces its own polished video interviews with them, so it's easy to find someone who'll really benefit from your donation. Started by an LA teacher who saw the problem first-hand, and backed by Ron Conway and the Kaufman Foundation for entrepreneurship, Wishbone has a high-leverage, accomplishable mission. It's not trying to start education programs, but rather bridge the gap between existing ones and the kids that need them. Years down the line it could be organizations like Wishbone that save tech from the talent crunch. | |
| Keen On… Ted Morgan: Why Skyhook Has Become A Harvard Business School Case Study [TCTV] | Top |
It was 6.30 on Sunday morning, August 9th, 2007 when Ted Morgan, the Boston based CEO of a little location technology start-up called Skyhook Wireless, got a totally unexpected call from an absolute stranger in California. Who calls a complete stranger at 6.30 am on a Sunday morning - especially from California, where it was 3.30 am? | |
| Microsoft Asks Windows Phone Developers To Keep The Quality Up And The Sex Down | Top |
Microsoft is trying to clean up the Windows Phone Marketplace and as part of this effort, the company just clarified some of its guidelines for developers who want to sell their apps in Microsoft's app store. Among other things, Microsoft has decided to move to "a more stringent interpretation and enforcement of our existing content policy" for apps that are "'racy' or sexual in nature." This is a problem we pointed out early last month. As Matt Burns put it, Windows Phone has a nasty porn addiction. Microsoft clearly agrees and is thankfully trying to kick the habit. Microsoft, just like most of its competitors, doesn't allow apps that contain "sexually suggestive or provocative" images or content. Swimsuits are fine. The company says that it will now pay "more attention to the icons, titles, and content of these apps and expects them to be more subtle and modest in the imagery and terms used." | |
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Today, 

Make way for another VC firm in Europe: Today sees the launch of
While Google keeps cramming its search results pages full of tools and social content, today
For a social network that's, for lack of a better term, monogamous, social network for couples
It looks like the team from Y Combinator-backed
The TechCrunch/Gadget Weekly is back with several new faces. Jordan and Chris join John and I for our first TC/G webcast in several months. In this week's episode we discuss our recent trip to RIM's Waterloo's HQ and also the perils of kids and interacting with seamless technology.
Google and its partner Onix Networking just
Japanese gaming giant GREE just acquired mid-core, mobile game developer Funzio for $210 million in an all-cash deal that should boost its ability to build games for Western audiences. Funzio is behind Crime City, Modern War and Kingdom Age, which are graphical RPGs that have had more than 20 million downloads on Apple's iOS, Android or Facebook platforms. I had heard a few weeks back that
Founded in 2008, San Francisco-based 
ID and fraud protection service
The fundamental misunderstanding of Facebook's mobile prospects is that it's
Foursquare is enhancing its feature set for businesses today, with the
It's too common a story: smart, low-income kid can't find their academic passion, so they drop out of school. But now you can rewrite this tragic tale with the help of
It was 6.30 on Sunday morning, August 9th, 2007 when
Microsoft is trying to clean up the Windows Phone Marketplace and as part of this effort, the company just
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