Tuesday, July 6, 2021

Daily Crunch - Nothing sets July 27 rollout for noise-canceling Ear (1) earbuds

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Tuesday, July 06, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for July 6, 2021. We're back after a holiday here in the United States. Not that that stopped global technology news, mind, so there's a lot to get into. Before we do, one more reminder about TechCrunch Early Stage later this week — your humble servant is running a session with venture capitalist Sarah Kunst about fundraising. It's going to rock. — Alex

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TechCrunch Top 3

Today's Top 3 are all about conflict. Between tech companies, between tech companies and governments, and between tech companies and their shareholders. Enjoy:

  • Governments versus tech: The scrap between China's government and Chinese ride-hailing company Didi escalated over the break, from the company having to stop accepting new users to losing its spot in app stores. The company's stock is down sharply today. Our read? China's government crackdown on tech is not over, and Chinese companies going public in America just hit a pace better described as glacial. Related: Twitter versus India is still rolling along, and it's not going well.
  • A cloudy mess: Remember that huge deal to award a cloud contract from the U.S. military to one major tech company? Microsoft won; Amazon pitched a fit. And now neither company will get the $10 billion deal. Womp.
  • Box versus investors: Rounding out our conflict coverage, the latest from Box. Former cloud storage darling and present-day public enterprise productivity shop Box is locked in a lengthy argument with activist investor Starboard. Today, Box went the corporate equivalent of supernova by releasing a TikTok video of its communications with the investing group, essentially calling them out for hypocrisy. Not that that charge means much to amoral capital pools searching for above-market returns, but, hey, it made for some good headlines.

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Startups/VC

Today's startup news includes a number of funding rounds, a neat new venture capital fund and some SPAC news from space (and Earth):

  • Super.mx raises $7.2 million: The Mexico City-based insurtech startup has put together a Series A for its "managing general agent" approach to offering coverage. The startup claims to be able to "handle the entire user experience just like a direct-to-consumer carrier, but with the breadth of product choice offered by an aggregator."
  • Single.Earth raises $7.9M for crypto-carbon tokens: Here's an idea that I don't fully understand: linking carbon credits to tokens that represent the real world. That's the gist of Single.Earth, which wants to shake up how companies compensate for their carbon footprint. It uses MERIT tokens, and, per its website, is creating a "digital twin" of the natural world.
  • Wagmo raises $12.5M for better pet insurance: Insurtech is a hot market because insurance is a huge market. So large that even its subdivisions are attracting startup competition. Wagmo — not Waymo, mind — wants to bring more pet services into its product to cover your pet more holistically.

Next, a new fund:

  • iFly.vc raises second fund worth $46M: I don't bring you many new venture capital fundraises because they seem a bit meta for our startup focus, but here's one regardless. Why include it? The venture capital group — which has a neat history, as the post details — relocated from San Francisco to Austin during the pandemic. That's notable.

And from the SPAC beat:

  • Space SPAC: Sattelogic is going public via a SPAC. Its deck is light on past results and heavy on future incomes.
  • Earth SPAC: Nextdoor is going public via a SPAC. Its deck is far more rooted in terrestrial things, like trailing revenue.

Finally, TechCrunch covered upcoming headphones from Nothing, a hardware upstart that we don't know much about. But it thinks its $99 headphone offering can compete with Apple's AirPods Pro line. Which cost 2.5x as much. If a startup can manage that, we'll be super impressed. And Nothing will be worth several somethings.

Startups/VC image

Image Credits: Nothing

Nothing founder Carl Pei on Ear (1) and building a hardware startup from scratch

In an exclusive interview with TechCrunch Hardware Editor Brian Heater, Nothing Founder Carl Pei discussed the product and design principles underpinning Ear (1), a set of US$99/€99/£99 wireless earbuds that will hit the market later this month.

“We're starting with smart devices,” said Pei. “Ear (1) is our first device. I think it has good potential to gain some traction.”

Despite Apple’s market share and the number of players already competing in the space, “we've just focused on being ourselves,” said Nothing’s founder, who also shared initial marketing plans and discussed the inherent tensions involved with manufacturing consumer hardware.

“Everything is a trade-off. Like if you pursue this design, that has a ton of implications. Battery life has ton of implications on size and on cost. The materials you use have implications on cost. Everything has an implication on timeline. It's like 4D chess in terms of trade-offs.”

Read the full interview on Extra Crunch.

(Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

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Big Tech Inc.

We got through most of the Big Tech news in our Top Three today, but there's still a bit more for your enjoyment:

TechCrunch Experts: Growth Marketing

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As usual, if you have a recommendation of a growth marketer we should know about, fill out the survey here.

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Friday, July 2, 2021

Daily Crunch - In one of India's largest exits, Swedish media giant MTG buys PlaySimple for $360M

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Friday, July 02, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for July 2. We are heading into a holiday weekend here in the United States, so you might imagine that tech news slowed down. It did not, as we'll see shortly. Looking ahead, TC Early Stage 2021: Marketing & Fundraising is next week and Disrupt is around the corner. Get hype! — Alex

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The TechCrunch Top 3

  • When SPACs attack: The United States Department of Justice is investigating Lordstown Motors, the embattled EV company that went public via a SPAC. Detractors of the company have punched holes in the story it told before going public, and the company's SPAC deck has proven to be somewhat, well, disconnected from reality. The company needs more money, it turns out, despite having told investors that it would not. Whoops.
  • China v. Didi v. American investors: Sticking to the theme of companies in trouble, Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is in hot water with its own domestic regulators. The company has been told to halt new user registration, pending a cybersecurity review. Just days after it went public in the United States. Oof.
  • IBM's President steps down: Jim Whitehurst, who made his way to IBM via its Red Hat deal, is out. His tenure as president at the firm lasted 14 months. Details were light on his exit, per Ron Miller Yeesh.
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Image Credits: PlaySimple / MTG

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Startups/VC

Today's startup news has a strong non-American bias. That's because nearly everyone in the United States took most of today off, regardless of what their boss thought was going on. The rest of the world was still busy, however:

  • Licious raises tasty $192M round: The Bangalore-based meat and seafood e-commerce player has now raised through a Series F. A few years back we would have joked that the F in Series F stood for "failed to go public," but that's no longer the case. Why not raise a Series F when money is so cheap? The company is now worth more than $650 million, TechCrunch reports.
  • MTG buys PlaySimple for $360M: Why are investors betting so much money on the Indian startup ecosystem? Rising exit values, perhaps. TechCrunch noted that the sale of India's PlaySimple to Swedish gaming giant was "one of the largest exits in the Indian startup ecosystem."
  • Tiger invests $40M into Nigerian neobank: It's a big day for FairMoney, a Nigerian startup that has its genesis in offering consumers credit. It's also yet another round for African fintech, a sector that has felt pretty active lately.

3 guiding principles for CEOs who post on Twitter

Did you hear about the CEO who made misleading claims about a funding round and got sued by the SEC? How about that pharmaceutical executive whose taunts to a former secretary of state led to a 4.4% decline in the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index?

In case it isn’t clear: Startup executives are held to a higher standard when it comes to what they post on social media.

“Reputation and goodwill take a long time to build and are difficult to maintain, but it only takes one tweet to destroy it all,” says Lisa W. Liu, a senior partner at The Mitzel Group, a San Francisco-based law practice that serves many startups.

To help her clients (and Extra Crunch readers) stay out of trouble, Liu has six basic questions for tech execs with itchy Twitter fingers.

And if the answer to any of them is "I don't know," don't post.

(Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

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Big Tech Inc.

Today's Big Tech news is a mixed bag, but a fun one. And each story has a strong California hook. Let's begin:

  • GM is investing in a California lithium extraction project: Why? Batteries. Gotta have lithium to make batteries. No batteries, no electric cars. In this case the project is actually pretty neat, having a strong hook to Salton Sea Geothermal Field near Los Angeles in the southern part of the state. The geothermal field will provide power and materials. So perhaps electric cars' pre-driving carbon footprint will be a bit more sustainable in the future.
  • Twitter tests more attention-grabbing misinformation labels: Twitter, a California-based company, is making its misinformation labeling a bit more standout. It's fun to watch social media companies make warnings sterner at the same time as Google is making advertisements better blend into its organic results.
  • Dutch court will hear another Facebook privacy lawsuit: A few Dutch nonprofits are suing Facebook over alleged "rampant collection of internet users' data — arguing the company does not have a proper legal basis for the processing," TechCrunch summarized. This case seems like it could have broad import, depending on how it shakes out. Given, you know, how much data collection goes on literally all the time, literally everywhere, online.

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Thursday, July 1, 2021

Daily Crunch - After quarters of explosive growth, a profitable Robinhood files to go public

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Thursday, July 01, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for July 1, 2021. It's Robinood IPO day! That's the headline, really. This afternoon the American consumer fintech company filed to go public in what will prove to be an early contender for the third-quarter's most important IPO. We also have a metric ton of other startup news for you. And don't forget that the next TechCrunch event is next week! Let's go! — Alex

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The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Robinhood is going public: In our first look at the company's IPO filing we observed a quickly growing consumer fintech company that made money in 2020. The company swung to a loss in the first quarter of 2021, but as TechCrunch reported, that loss is largely immaterial. Robinhood closed out Q1 2021 on an annual run rate of more than $2 billion. Hot dang.
  • Apple's software rollout continues: After dropping public betas for iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 yesterday, Apple released the public beta version of macOS 12.0 Monterey. You can download it now, if you are a brave soul who wants to do some testing. For the rest of us, yes that's the sound of a required corporate update in our future.
  • Articulate raises $1.5B in Series A: After bootstrapping for ages, corporate edtech company Articulate raised a $1.5 billion Series A round on a $3.75 billion valuation. The outsized, putatively early-staged round was the leading story of the day until Robinhood arrived and kicked it into third.
The TechCrunch Top 3 image

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Startups/VC

Looping back to a few topics that TechCrunch has been covering extensively in recent weeks, there's fresh news from Karat, a neobank aimed at the creator economy. Everyone wants to make money off creators starting to make money, it seems. And from the global startup market, TechCrunch has fresh notes on the future of European IPOs for those of you into such things.

Now, the day's rounds:

  • Nowports raises $16M to automate Latin American freight: Supply chain software startups are big business, and Nowports wants in on the boom. The startup's latest round was led by Mouro Capital, with Nowports now backed by around $24 million in capital to date.
  • Codat raises $40M to build the Plaid for companies: APIs are popular. Fintech APIs are super popular. And fintech APIs that connect individuals' money to other companies are Plaid. Codat wants to build Plaid, but for SMB financial data. And Tiger is now backing it.
  • Mercado Bitcoin raises $200M for its bitcoin market: In the wake of the Coinbase direct listing, and seemingly strong crypto trading volumes in the second quarter, it's not a huge surprise to see fintech companies that facilitate consumer bitcoin purchases attract attention. Seeing Brazil's Mercado raise such a huge check, then, is not a huge surprise.
  • Good news for hungry Europeans: If you want groceries, and want them now, "Rohlik, a Czech startup that has built an online grocery ordering and delivery business selling grocery fare," TechCrunch reports, has just raised €100 million in a round that values the company at €1 billion.
  • Ghost raises $100M for crash prevention: How much money can self-driving car tech collect? At least nine-figures more we've learned thanks to the new Ghost round. Ghost is also the name of a web content CMS. This is not that. Instead, this Ghost is working on what TechCrunch called "universal collision avoidance technology" for autonomous driving systems.

To guard against data loss and misuse, the cybersecurity conversation must evolve

Locking down data centers and networks against intruders is just one aspect of an organization’s security responsibilities; cloud services, collaboration tools and APIs extend security perimeters even farther. What’s more, the systems created to prevent the misuse and mishandling of sensitive data often depend heavily on someone’s better angels.

According to Sid Trivedi, a partner at Foundation Capital, and seven-time CIO Mark Settle, IT managers need to replace existing DLP frameworks with a new one that centers on DMP — data misuse protection.

These solutions “will provide data assets with more sophisticated self-defense mechanisms instead of relying on the surveillance of traditional security perimeters,” and many startups are already competing in this space.

(Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

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Big Tech Inc.

We revisited some themes we've seen before in our startup section. The same goes for our look at Big Tech. On the government-and-tech side of things:

  • India doesn't appreciate Big Tech companies, part 47: Manish Singh reports that "India's central bank has identified Big Tech's push into financial services as a challenge for banks in the South Asian market, saying the growing presence of these firms have prompted concerns about creation of an uneven playing field." Recall that India is also irked at Twitter and has various other beefs with different tech companies.
  • Paris fines Airbnb: Sticking to the government theme, Airbnb got hit with an €8 million fine today, a fee worth 0.14% of the company's $6.6 billion in cash it held at the end of the first quarter, per its latest earnings report. The Daily Crunch would like to congratulate the City of Light on its auspicious regulatory victory.
  • Lastly, from Pinterest, something that stood out while going back through the day's news: A prohibition of weight-loss advertising. Lots of folks struggle with eating disorders, body image and related issues. So Pinterest is doing away with one type of advertisement that might harm those folks. With decisions like this we don't want to be overly kind to the company in question as we don't know how much money it is leaving on the table, but the move could hint at more active social media regulation of owned platforms in the future. At least when it comes to ads.

TechCrunch Experts: Growth Marketing

We're reaching out to startup founders to tell us who they turn to when they want the most up-to-date growth marketing practices. Fill out the survey here.

Read one of the recommendations we've received below!

Name of marketer: Amy Konefal

Name of recommender: Dan Reardon, formerly of vudu.com

Recommendation:  "Amy drove scale for us as we grew to a half-billion-dollar company. She identified and exploited efficiencies and built out a rich portfolio of channels."

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Community

The Pittsburgh City Spotlight was a huge success! Thank you to everyone who attended, as well as the over 80 companies that submitted to participate in our pitch-off. In case you missed the event, you can check out the interview with Pittsburgh's Mayor, our chat with CMU's President and the latest on Duolingo from their director of Engineering.

Cool things happening in your city? Drop us a tweet about where you'd like to see us spotlight next.

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TC Eventful

We're rolling into the long holiday weekend here in the States, and in true American style, we're offering a Fourth of July sale on tickets to not just one but all FOUR TechCrunch events in 2021: TechCrunch Early Stage (July 8-9), TC Disrupt (Sept 21-23), TC Sessions: SaaS (October 27) and TC Sessions: Space (December 14-15).

Our 4th of July ticket sale kicks into gear starting today through July 6 where you can get two tickets for the price of one on any of these TechCrunch events coming soon to a virtual platform near you. You can find all of our events and lock in your two-for-one tickets at techcrunch.com/events.

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