Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Daily Crunch - In $8.45B deal, Amazon to buy MGM Studios

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Wednesday, May 26, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for Wednesday, May 26. Yes, we're going to get to the huge Amazon-MGM deal, but we have to chat about a startup first. Have you heard of Poparazzi? If you have kids you might have — it's the latest social phenom. And it just ran its way up to the top of the App Store. (Too bad it's not Puparazzi!)

Yes, I feel old as well. Take a look if you want to know what the kids are up to. Now, the rest of the news. — Alex

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Image Credits: MGM

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Amazon snaps up MGM: The biggest news out today is the giant Amazon-MGM deal worth more than $8 billion. Its studio purchase helps cement Amazon in the mix of tech companies with huge investments in the online video space. Observers believe the e-commerce giant plans to use MGM to bolster its Prime service, making consumers less likely to churn thanks to the inclusion of more services. Which rings hollow to us: Who is going to give up Prime, but be swayed by movies? The connection to shipping speed feels tenuous.
  • The global fintech boom: This morning, Clara announced a new round, mere months after it raised its preceding round of capital. The Mexican startup works in the corporate spend market, a startup niche that recently saw a $2.5 billion exit in the United States, and more capital for both Ramp and Brex. Our read here is that many nascent fintech formulas that work in the U.S. are going to have wide remit globally.
  • IPOs are back: The recent Flywire IPO pricing (strong) and first-day trading (even stronger) are indicative that the temporarily slowed public-offering market is back. So, Robinhood, let's go?

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Startups and VC

Here are five of the tastiest venture capital rounds that TechCrunch covered, showing off an array of niches and round sizes:

  • UK's Paysend raises $125M for mobile B2B payments: You are excused for wondering if every fintech round these days involves both companies and payments. I feel the same way. But what matters in the case of Paysend is that its model to provide SMB online payment services is happening from a post-Brexit U.K. Not even a tectonic decoupling can stop U.K. fintech, it seems.
  • Yalo raises $50M for conversational commerce: Here's a tech startup round that typifies the year. Did it raise less than a year ago? Yes. Did the company have funding find it, as opposed to the other way around? Yes. And did COVID accelerate its business? Yes. Yalo is a wager that the way we buy online is changing, a technology story if we've ever heard of one. And it's one that venture capitalists are lining up to bet on.
  • Skiff raises $3.7M for encrypted Google Docs: That's the pitch, per our own Zack Whittaker. Essentially, Skiff mimics the familiar features of Google Docs, but with end-to-end encryption. As a fan of privacy, I dig the project.
  • Treet raises $2.8M to help brands resell their own stuff: The online resale market is huge. ThreadUp is public now, as is Poshmark. But Treet is betting that there is still room in the market for more tech, namely its plan to get brands involved in their own resale market. It isn't the richest startup around, but given the sheer number of brands out there, it has a pretty huge TAM to grow into.

Finally, African fintech OPay is in the process of raising a huge new round. The investment could help push the continent's 2021 venture capital totals to new heights, based on data TechCrunch reported earlier in the week.

7 questions to ask before relocating your startup to Florida

Cities like Miami, Pittsburgh and Austin have been drawing talent and wealth from Silicon Valley for years, but the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the trend.

In recent months, many investors and entrepreneurs have noisily departed for Miami, citing the region’s favorable business climate and quality of life. It’s always good to consider one’s options, but before booking a moving van for the Sunshine State — or any emerging tech hub, for that matter — here are some basic questions entrepreneurs should ask themselves.

(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're not going to touch on the Amazon-MGM deal more here in the Big Tech section, leaving us room for all sorts of other news:

  • Facebook is looking into allowing users of both the Big Blue App and Instagram to hide social like counts. Which is great for your mental health, we suspect, if awful for those of us with overdeveloped competitive urges.
  • Visa is rebounding from its pre-nuptial breakup with fintech unicorn Plaid by building a vetted list of fintech startups that its friends and other customers may want to leverage. In a sense, it's a way for startups to get a stamp of approval from Visa, and possibly more clients in the process. What's in it for Visa? More digital payments. That's good for a company that does lots of payments work, we reckon.
  • GM and Lockheed are working on the next American lunar vehicle. It is very, very American to have the progenitors of the consumer Hummer and various weapons of death build our next extraplanetary go-kart. And it's good that we may go back to the moon? It's more than time.

To round out the Big Tech section today, OpenAI is out in the market with a $100 million fund to invest in startups. And Microsoft is partnering with the company and putting funds into the capital pool. It feels like ages ago that Microsoft told me that it wasn't getting into the VC game because the returns would not prove material to its asset base. That wasn't the point and the company seems to have figured that out.

TechCrunch reports that OpenAI's Sam Altman of Y Combinator fame said that the fund "plan[s] to make big early bets on a relatively small number of companies, probably not more than 10." Something to watch out for.

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Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Daily Crunch - Before the pandemic, Expensify made remote work cool and profitable

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Tuesday, May 25, 2021 By Jessica Brunner

Welcome to Daily Crunch for May 25, 2021. Whether you are a developer, a startup fanatic or merely someone with wanderlust, we have something for everyone today. Well, except for disappointed investors in Lordstown Motors. They are stuck holding the bag today after the American electric vehicle company announced a pretty awful set of earnings.

But for the rest of us, there's quite a lot of tech and startup news to enjoy. Let's get to it! — Alex

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Image Credits: Nigel Sussman

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • TechCrunch's deep dive into Expensify continues: Ahead of its IPO, TechCrunch is digging into Expensify's growth from startup to unicorn, with our latest entry discussing how the company shed its "Silicon Valley arrogance" to go global.
  • $300M for vertical farming: Startups shaking up the agricultural world is no longer a surprising idea, but the recent Bowery Farms round did make us sit up and take note. The company is now worth $2.3 billion, and its "vertically farmed produce is now available in 850 grocery stores."
  • Venture capital's global march continues: New data from Africa indicates that the continent's historically lagging venture capital results are making up for lost time. Tage Kene-Okafor reports that VC activity in Africa could reach "between $2.25 billion and $2.8 billion" this year. That would be a new record.

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Startups and VC

$26M for Airbyte, which is working to better connect data to where it's needed: Having data is one thing, but startups are starting to get into not only storing data, but also how it gets ingested (Monte Carlo is working on that), and making sure it's moved to where it's needed. That's where Airbyte comes in. And the company's latest round comes just months after it raised a $5.6 million seed deal.

We asked our own Ron Miller what induced him to cover the round. Here's what he had to say: "What attracted me to this round was the fact that the founders were using open source to drive the development of a community of users, then worrying about monetization down the road."

Twilio opens wallet for Hyro: Whenever a company well known for leading a sea change in the tech world cuts a check, we tend to take notice. Recall when Salesforce was hip; its investments made waves. Today, Twilio is the BigCo in question, and Hyro the startup it is backing.

Per our own Jordan Crook, Hyro "calls itself an adaptive communications platform, which essentially means that customers use plug-and-play tools to get information to end users in a conversational way." Very cool.

$50M for Whatnot, which wants to livestream e-commerce: Look, if you are not into buying things, Whatnot is not going to be your jam. But if you are, it has a neat take on e-commerce that is popular around the world, but has yet to take off in North America. Notably this round comes mere months after Whatnot raised $20 million.

Something something real-life NFTs?: What happens when you cross a startup that wants to bring blockchain to the real estate market and NFTs? You get this: Propy. The startup in question, is "auctioning a real apartment as an NFT." I don't get it! But maybe that's the point.

$65M for social engineering-fighting Tessian: U.K.-based Tessian is a cybersecurity company, which means that of course it raised a huge new round. The cybersecurity market is hotter than all heck given *waves arms around at all the breaches lately.* But what makes Tessian neat is that it is taking on the human side of things by "flagging problematic [usage] patterns [that] could signify risky stuff is happening."

Brian Chesky describes a faster, nimbler post-pandemic Airbnb

Managing Editor Jordan Crook interviewed Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky to discuss the future of travel and what it was like leading the world's biggest hospitality startup during a global pandemic.

“Our business initially dropped 80% in eight weeks. I say it's like driving a car. You can't go 80 miles an hour, slam on the brakes and expect nothing really bad to happen.

"Now imagine you're going 80 miles an hour, slam on the brakes, then rebuild the car kind of while still moving and then try to accelerate into an IPO, all on Zoom.”

(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 was Microsoft's Build conference, the second time that the annual Redmond developer confab took place virtually. But before we get into that, a short note on autonomous deliveries.

Getting stuff brought to your house without human power is a long-running technology dream. Remember those Amazon drones that everyone got super stoked about and then we never heard from again (not once, but twice)? Or the cute Postmates robot? Well, there's another set of players in the space, namely JD.com and Meituan. TechCrunch has the latest on their self-driving delivery efforts.

Back to Build — oh boy was there a lot of news. From top to bottom, Microsoft is bringing more Azure services to Kubernetes, new tools for developers building on top of Teams, updates to its Edge browser as Internet Explorer shuffles off this mortal coil, enterprise Azure support for PyTorch, and, my personal favorite, the company is leveraging GPT-3 (which I think is super cool) to help people code in natural language.

I used to be a Microsoft beat reporter. I kinda miss those days. It's a huge company with a finger in nearly every pie, which makes covering it surprisingly horizontal. Regardless, enjoy Frederic's coverage!

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Community 

Some of us have started traveling again … revenge travel, if you will. Our own Jordan Crook chatted with Airbnb's CEO and we asked him if he thinks "the trends we're seeing in travel right now, like more rural destinations and decreased business travel, are here to stay?” See what he had to say here and tell us what you think here.

Do you like data? How about BIG Data? Come hang out with us on Clubhouse and chat about our recent Extra Crunch article on the topic this Thursday at 9 a.m. PDT/12 p.m. EDT. Need a Clubhouse invite? We got you; just swing on by the Discord server and ask.

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Monday, May 24, 2021

Daily Crunch - Police search 2 Twitter offices in India after politician receives warning label

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Monday, May 24, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Welcome back to Daily Crunch. It's Monday, May 24, and all I can think about is how much I want a Surface Duo now that it can do two-screen gaming. And one of those new iMacs. I don't need either, of course, but that doesn't stop my coveting both of the gadgets. Alas.

Regardless, it was a super busy start to the week, with lots of startup funding rounds, more in the long-running saga of governments trying to control social media platforms, even more IPO news and the latest troubles with Tesla. Let's cut the chatter and dive in. — Alex

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Image Credits: Nasir Kachroo / NurPhoto / Getty Images

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Governments vs. Tech: Indian police tied to the central government showed up at two different Twitter offices today, in what appeared to be an intimidation effort following Twitter's decision to not unlabel a tweet from a member of the current ruling party as manipulated media.

A few things here. First, India is not alone in trying to force social media companies to behave as local governments want them to. That said, what the current Indian government is doing is particularly egregious and doesn't bode well for the country's tech ecosystem as a whole.

  • Tesla owes Norway: American electric car darling Tesla appears to be in hot water with Norway after a "Norwegian conciliation council" ordered the company to pay $16,000 each to thousands of Model S owners after "it found that a software update led to longer charging times." Ouch. Tesla will have to sell lots of American regulatory credits to cover that loss. Norway is a key market for EVs.
  • U.S. cities buy abuse-linked tech: From the "you should read this" files, the latest report from our own Zack Whittaker and IPVM states that "at least a hundred U.S. counties, towns and cities have bought Chinese-made surveillance systems that the U.S. government has linked to human rights abuses." Not good.

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Startups and VC

As always we're picking and choosing the best rounds from the day, so feel free to scrounge around the blog if you need even more!

Solidus Labs raises $20M for crypto-snooping: As the value of cryptocurrencies rose in the past year, so too did business at Solidus Labs, which detects "volume and price manipulation" among bitcoin and its brethren. Per its CEO, Asaf Meir, his company saw a "400% increase in inbound demand over 2020." That sounds about right. Also, Solidus should drop a monthly report on the level of manipulation on every exchange and crypto. That would rule.

Fireflies.ai raises $14M to record, transcribe and connect your meetings: Former Acceleprise company Fireflies is building software that will record and transcribe your meetings, and then connect the text — and perhaps the embedded tasks — to other bits of software. It's interesting, and growing like a weed. So Khosla helped put $14 million into it.

Mono raises $2M to power African fintech: From building the Plaid for Africa to "power the internet economy in Africa," Mono is not short on vision. And now it has had its accounts refreshed to pursue its plans to "[streamline] various financial data in a single API for companies and third-party developers." APIs are cool. Fintech is cool. Fintech APIs are extra cool. That's our take.

Flat6Labs raises $13.2M to fund Egyptian startups: This is fund news, but it's small enough that it fits inside the startup section today. In short, since 2011 Flat6Labs has been an accelerator in Egypt and Tunisia. And now it has a new checkbook to play with.

Inside Zeta Global's IPO: Finally from the startup world today, Zeta Global is going public. It's an offering that could set the tone for the martech world for some time to come. So, we dug into its numbers a bit tardily to figure out just what Zeta has that public investors might want.

When to walk away from a VC who wants to invest in your startup

Ofri Ben-Porat flew from London to NYC to meet potential investors, but at the last minute, one canceled, claiming illness. Moments later, he received a DocSend push notification informing him that said VC had just opened the pitch deck he’d sent days before.

Undeterred, he showed up anyway and pretended he hadn’t received their email. The discussion went well; after he flew home, the VCs offered pre-terms and due diligence, “but ultimately, I didn't feel right taking money from them,” says Ben-Porat.

Securing the right amount of funding at the right moment can make or break a startup, but founders who can’t identify red flags — or worse, ignore them — will live to regret it.

(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.

What has a zillion hands and likes to copy its friends? Facebook! This time, however, Facebook could be doing something interesting. TechCrunch dug through some creator-friendly feature work that Big Blue is putting into its TikTok clone. So it's still running the copy machine at full tilt, just with a few upgrades.

Turning back to Apple, not everything is M1 chips and purple iPhones. Some things are less good at the Cupertino-based technology leviathan. Today TechCrunch reported on a few different macOS vulnerabilities that, frankly, don't sound good. What's the old adage? Buy a PC; they just work?

In happier Apple news, the company has a pile of new software updates for your enjoyment, especially if you are an iPhone or iPad user.

Don't fret, Microsoft fans, we have something for you as well. Namely a review of the new Surface Laptop 4. It's pretty darn good, keeping all its predecessor's weaknesses and strengths, with new guts.

Wrapping, ByteDance has another chart-topping app; Airbnb is doubling down on guest flexibility, though we have questions; SiriusXM is partnering with TikTok on a new channel; and SensorTower is making sure that there is at least some M&A to report on.

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TechCrunch Experts is still collecting survey responses to help us identify the top email marketers in tech!

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TC Sessions: Mobility 2021 is right around the corner of your calendar (June 9). If you want to place your ground-breaking, edge-cutting, envelope-pushing (no extra charge for clichés) early-stage startup in front of the world's leading mobility movers, shakers and makers you gotta hustle. You have just one week left to buy one of our remaining three Startup Exhibitor Packages.

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