Blackboard Acquires Moodlerooms, NetSpot To Offer Open Source Learning Technology

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Blackboard, the maker of learning and education software for enterprises and schools, has acquired Moodlerooms and NetSpot, two providers of open source online learning technology. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Both companies provide learning management hosting, support, and consulting services and products to clients using open source systems. NetSpot is also a reseller and service provider for Blackboard Collaborate. Moodlerooms primarily serves clients in North America, while NetSpot serves a client base in Australia, New Zealand and the Asia Pacific region.

Blackboard says each team will also become part of Blackboard’s new Education Open Source Services group, which will focus on the development of open source learning technologies globally.

Last year, Blackboard was acquired by Providence Equity Partners for $1.6 billion. As we’ve written in the past, Blackboard has not always had the best reputation among students, especially in terms of user experience, but the company has thousands of colleges and universities using its platform.

The company faces competition from CourseKit, Instructure, Nixty, and others.


Open Web Judo: ThinkUp App Goes For-Profit In Bid To Decentralize The Social Web

Gina Trapani Anil Dash

ThinkUp App, the open source web application born out of the non-profit Expert Labs that lets you capture, store and analyze your activity across various social networking sites, has rebooted as a commercial entity.

ThinkUp the company will be headed up by Lifehacker founding editor Gina Trapani and famed early blogger and entrepreneur Anil Dash, who have been working together on Expert Labs since 2009. Expert Labs, meanwhile, will be shutting down, according to blog posts by Trapani and Dash.

To help fund its early operations, ThinkUp is seeking to secure some $1 million in a grant through the Knight Foundation’s News Challenge (ThinkUp estimates it will need a total of $2.4 million in outside funding.) And this is where it gets really cool: According to its application there, ThinkUp aims to utilize the content it collects on existing corporate social sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Foursquare to essentially subvert the closed ecosystem they’ve come to embody — “using those connections to enable the creation of a new decentralized network behind the scenes.” In effect, ThinkUp wants to use the weight of the existing social web against it — a Judo move to ultimately make the Internet a more open place.

So why is ThinkUp going to the journalism-focused Knight Foundation for help with this? Because it also plans to build a sexy, newsy website to convince people that decentralized social networking matters. From ThinkUp’s Knight application:

“We will draw people in through a compelling media site that encourages participation via our decentralized platform. We have unique experience in creating some of the most important tools and most influential sites on the social web. And we’re using that experience to build a decentralized, peer-to-peer network that powers a great media property with broad appeal — imagine if Digg or Reddit were open, decentralized and powered by a network instead of votes.”

It all sounds very ambitious, but also very worthwhile. Open web advocates believe that decentralization is essential for maintaining the competition and diversity necessary to keep technology moving forward. But as more and more people spend the majority of time interacting with the Internet through a handful of websites controlled by increasingly powerful companies, in many ways we’re farther away from an open web now than ever before. ThinkUp wants to shake up this status quo. Dash explained ThinkUp’s mission in his blog post thusly:

“…What ThinkUp represents is a lot of important concepts: Owning your actions and words on the web. Encouraging more positive and fruitful conversations on social networks. Gaining insights into ourselves and our friends based on what we say and share. And the possibility of discovering important information or different perspectives if we can return the web back to its natural state of not being beholden to any one company or proprietary network.”

ThinkUp acknowledges that it is not the first to try to make the open social web a reality, and that Diaspora and Singly’s Locker Project have similar aims. But ThinkUp’s Knight application says these projects have limited traction because they “focus on the tech first rather than a compelling user experience.” ThinkUp, on the other hand, is building a super slick app from the start. It also is apparently looking to work alongside the Facebooks and Googles of the world, not totally against them — and to me, that is what could ultimately make ThinkUp a winner.

To be sure, ThinkUp has a long road ahead of it, as it is facing off against some of the most powerful forces on the web today. It’s great to see big names such as Trapani and Dash committing to such an endeavor, and it will certainly be interesting to watch ThinkUp’s evolution in the weeks and months ahead.

Photo of Gina Trapani courtesy of Flickr user ginatrapani; photo of Anil Dash via dashes.com.


Google+: The Charge Of The Like Brigade

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A recent post by a defecting Googler (at his new and previous home, Microsoft) suggests that a fundamental reordering of Google’s priorities has made it far less than the company it once was. A sudden comprehension of the danger posed by Facebook’s ever-expanding platform caused the company to enter a sort of berserker state, focusing solely on reinventing social while neglecting or amputating anything that didn’t fit into its new mission. Or so the tale goes.

There have been times recently when I’ve felt the need to deflect a few of the slings and arrows trained on Google. This time, however, they are well-deserved. Google’s big bet was based on bad instincts, jealousy, and hubris — not the curiosity, experimentation, and agility that have characterized them theretofore.

Could Google+ ever have been anything but a failure?

Just as a caveat: the problem with criticizing Google+ is that it’s a good product. It’s not for everybody, and there are problems with how it models social networks, but the only real problem it has is that there’s no one engaging with it. There are, of course, some people on it, but it’s hardly at a level that would make it what Google obviously intended it to be.

That said, Google should never have thought of it that way in the first place. The concept, as well-represented as it is in the product, was wrong to begin with. The whole project is a failure to understand their strengths and their competitors’ weaknesses.

Looking for clues in how Google’s products have improved or differentiated themselves previously (whether they flew or crashed) isn’t much help. You can’t dissect Google+ by proxy in Wave or Gmail. It’s better to look at their intentions.

It seems that Sun Tzu has much to offer Google respecting their approach to social. Nietzsche, too.

“Those skilled in war bring the enemy to the field of battle and are not brought there by him.”

“Sharing is broken.” There’s a hell of a place to start. To make such a statement about a sector with so much diversity and velocity is a red flag to begin with. First, because it isn’t broken, it’s a work in progress. And second, even if it were broken, Google has never fixed anything before.

Google never said “What you’re doing is broken. Use our thing instead.” They always said “Did you know you we can do that too, for free?” Did they say Excel was broken when they let you make spreadsheets in Docs? Did they break down email to its bare bones and remake it for Gmail? Of course not. Google was about ubiquity, diversity, and a few memorable little quirks or improvements that set them out from the crowd.

To attempt to build something new, a la Apple, with the assurance that company likes to make (“This is the best way, which is why we made it the only way”) is not a Google strength. They just aren’t good at making new things. Never have been. Making existing things easier, faster, more accessible — sure. But inventing them? Not so much. So the idea that they were going to invent a new way to share should have rung alarm bells to begin with.

Sharing was never broken; Google merely found that they were losing a battle they had not even prepared for. Their declaration of war was a declaration of defeat.

“When torrential water tosses boulders, it is because of momentum. When the strike of a hawk breaks the body of its prey, it is because of timing.”

Google is neither small nor weak. It is immense, established, technically proficient, and, to an extent, trusted. Within the confines of non-monopolistic actions, it holds search like a gun. By rewarding those sites and services that agreed with its planned trajectory for search, they cast a shadow on the others, too light to be called punishment but still keenly felt. They are a household word, so closely identified with their service that they have become a global euphemism for searching on the internet.

They are a company of momentum — some would say inertia, but inertia in tech is soon eroded by more energetic competitors. No, Google has momentum, and their force has grown large enough that, like two gunmen in the old west, the town wasn’t big enough for them and Facebook. The conflict was inevitable. Which is why it’s so strange that instead of choosing to be the mighty river, they opted to strike as the hawk.

What was Google+? A single product, made to compete with an entire ecosystem. A product, moreover, lacking the single most important ingredient: users. Now, unless you are sure that your product is far, far better than what’s out there, you are not the hawk. Steve Jobs knew he was the hawk in 2007, and he knew that what he was doing would break its prey. The look on his face while he describes the competition is one of sheer predatory glee.

Is Google+ the iPhone to Facebook’s Palm Pilot? Surely not. Who judged that it was? That person is incompetent.

“The great fighters of old first put themselves beyond the possibility of defeat, and then waited for an opportunity of defeating the enemy.”

Google was, against all reason, impatient to get into social. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to build a social network, of course. There are many kinds and many approaches, from niche to meta, from creative to filtrative. The Internet is a community of communities, and it is natural, even admirable, to want to create a new one. But Google decided that instead of creating a new one, a new space for itself, it would instead attempt to unseat the largest and most stable of them all. Hubris!

Facebook, of course, is not unassailable. It too will pass away. It is after all only the latest in a series of improvements on the general social network model. It has proven to be more flexible and resilient than its predecessors, but it isn’t immortal; even now there is a hum of discontent among users, low in frequency but just audible. Trust is an issue; ads are an issue; filtering is an issue. Will these issues destroy Facebook in the next year? Of course not. But as another saying goes, if you wait long enough by the river, you will see the bodies of your enemies float by.

Who can wait longer by the river? Facebook, a transitory model for connecting people that may or may not reflect the zeitgeist of social communication in five years? Or Google, which indexes and tracks the entire visible internet and whatever it can digitize from the analog world? I feel sure that, barring disaster, it would be Google on the shore watching Facebook go down the river.

Google always played a long game, but failed to in social. Why didn’t they bide their time, refining their ideas, pretending total disinterest? Making Facebook seem like the only game in town has many benefits. People distrust monopolies. If people feel they are choosing to be on Facebook, they will justify that choice. If the choice is made for them, they will find a reason to resent it. Google must know this, because they experience it every day.

So why did they jump the gun? The data! That beautiful, plentiful, personal data! Google is a datavore; its reason to exist is to organize all the world’s data, using ads to fund its habit. And on the table before them, a feast unprecedented in depth and variety! Imagine the amount of data produced by a single day of Facebook’s operations. But, like Tantalus, Google is prohibited from reaching and and taking it even though it’s right… there.

Why did Google launch a social network? The same reason a child snatches a cookie from the cookie jar. They simply couldn’t resist.

“To win one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the epitome of skill. To subdue the enemy without fighting is the epitome of skill.”

Could Google ever have won? I think so. But not by blitz. By envelopment.

Google’s presence is felt all over the net. Remember that browser plug-in that sounded a siren whenever it detected Google in any way, shape, or form? People tolerate having Google everywhere because, for the most part, it’s a neutral presence, like streetlamps in a city. You’re logged into Google like you’re a resident of the city. You don’t think about it, and you don’t have to think about it.

The opportunity this gives Google is simply to be where you are, and have you know it and not mind. That’s huge. Facebook gets flak for being where you are, because Facebook is a place you go to, not a presence that surrounds you. Facebook is a personal place, something you log into, and you don’t want to have it following you around. On the other hand, you expect to turn around and find Google there, the way you expect your own shadow.

The natural thing to do given this advantage is, in fact, what Google did. They just did it too hard. They made a whole competing service, completely empty and more or less disconnected from everything, and threw it at the enemy.

It seems to me that they only needed one part of it: the +1 button.

Google’s ubiquity would let that button exist almost everywhere a user goes. No plug-in needed, no sign-up or tracking by the site. The URL or the resource itself (video, music, image) is already known to Google — you probably found it through Google anyway. All that’s missing is a button or key or extension that +1s it. The rest follows naturally. (Obviously this is part of what the extant +1 button does, but we are building it again from scratch.)

What happens when you +1 something in this simple system? Well, on Google’s side, it gets added to a pile of data: timestamped and correlated to your other activity and the activity around that site and similar sites, it would be a valuable unit of deliberate user input. And of course it makes one big number go up by one, whether the site or resource wants to show it or not — just like its PageRank stat or hit counter. A number we can all agree to use because it’s not for some community, some network, some service. It’s just for the Internet. Google already tracks visitors and sites and traffic, now they’ve just added one more thing to the pile. It’s a neutral party and it’s already present wherever you go.

And what about on the user side? Well, it could easily be tied to other actions, since once you +1 the thing, Google doesn’t really care what happens next. You could forget you ever did it. Or you could tie it to actions like posting or liking it on Facebook, or sending it to your Tumblr, or tweeting it. Whatever you want. It’s just a trigger you pull on a website — what happens after you pull the trigger doesn’t matter to Google, all they care about is that the trigger was pulled in the first place.

Oh, and don’t forget that everything you’ve +1′d will be saved to your Google profile – you can go and check it any time you want, by date, by site, whatever. Why, it could even have a little snippet or image for each one, or you could add a tag or caption; you could even do that right when you +1 it. And maybe if you +1 a video or piece of music, it’ll have that embedded for you just for your convenience. Like the other Google services, you’ll have a few templates and layouts you can use to make this little pile of data your own, like Gmail. Naturally it’ll be searchable. And if you just want to upload something, that’s cool too, it goes into cloud storage and is part of your collection like everything else.

Now, this information is of course private by default, and although you contribute to total metrics, your individual +1s are anonymous outside of your account. But a few people will want to make them public. And why shouldn’t they? People like to share things, and this +1 thing is straightforward, user-friendly, and versatile. So they make it public. Now people can see what they’ve +1′d.

Once a few are public, why, of course people will want to see what other people are doing. And you don’t want to have to go to their profile all the time. So Google will let you add them as a connection, probably with rules like they can’t see things with certain tags, or what have you. How do you add them? You go to their profile and +1 it, of course. Now when they +1 things, it’ll show up in your stream, and they can tweet or post it on Facebook later if they want. And did you know, Google reminds you, that you can click on their little icon any time and instantly connect via chat, audio, or video, no plugin necessary? You can even drag a friend’s icon in to invite them. But hey, it’s not a “social network” — these are just things you can do using Google services. You can do all of them or none of them.

All this happens outside of Facebook and completely parallel. It takes place naturally, people can use it as much or as little as they like, and it’s only a destination if you make it one. It doesn’t replace Facebook, it augments it (and other services) with a more generalized mechanism for saving and recommending things on the web.

If Google had done this, if they had built a community around a mechanism instead of trying to meet Facebook head-on in battle, they might have succeeded. They might have built an Internet-wide community of individuals who want to track, save, and share what they do on the web. They’d also have a simple way of letting users connect to one another in a natural and very Internet way. And they’d have done it all without antagonizing anyone openly; it could plug right into other services, if they play nice, and Google looks like the user-focused facilitator it once was.

And coincidentally, all of a sudden there are a hundred million people using that +1 button, reading friends’ updates, chatting and sharing seamlessly, and starting to question what it is that Facebook has that Google doesn’t.

“Battle not with monsters, lest ye become a monster.”

(This was originally the title of this post, but I decided to have a world-class pun instead.)

But Google didn’t do all that. Google+ was born and not molded, naked and altricial and all at once instead of incrementally and subtly and responsively, into a world that hadn’t asked for it, and didn’t really need it. What are the wages of Google’s tactless warfare?

Sun Tzu actually does say “To defeat your enemy, you must become your enemy.” But he meant it in terms of understanding. Google has actually become their own enemy, both in how they have thwarted their own development and how they have donned the tainted garb of monopoly. These clothes were made for Facebook to wear in social, but Google has convinced the world that they too are a good fit.

I’ll be less obtuse. What Google has done, remarkably, is to transfer all the worst qualities of Facebook to themselves while managing to retain almost none of the good ones. They were behind the scenes; now they are in people’s faces. They were a service; now they are a destination. They monitored the web; now they distort it. Whether or not these things are really true, they are now popular perceptions of Google. Facebook meanwhile has taken on a few of Google’s best characteristics as it has expanded across the web.

Google lost its status as a neutral party because of a number of choices that minimized the user and promoted themselves unilaterally. How many of these decisions were made deliberately, and how many innocently? It’s hard to say, but in the end the analysis is merely academic. The reality is that they are no longer trusted. The liberties they took with their best assets were questionable at best and infuriating at worst. And they have had the side effect of drawing attention to just how much power Google wields.

Two years ago, Google was a utility. Now it’s a monopoly being watched not only by the government but by every user, many of whom have been burned or frustrated by one of the many changes. Two years ago it was Facebook in that position, and people were excited about the prospect of a better, more independent social network. Now people are uploading videos to Facebook instead of YouTube. Think about that.

And worst of all, they can’t go back. They put too much wood behind the arrow. Maybe it’s more apt to say that instead of making a new arrow, they used the wood to make a new bow — and now all their old arrows, the ones that built them a globe-spanning empire, had to be refitted.

The changes are too big, the culture too different. They can’t try again; they can’t put it down the memory hole like they have with other, less monumental products. How can you call a do-over on two years of fundamental reordering of the entire company?

Is this Google’s swan song? Of course not. But it is almost certainly their biggest failure by a good distance. And it’s not a Flubber-like experimental miss like Orkut and Wave and the many Labs projects snuffed before their time. It corrupted Google’s primary mission, angered users, and eroded trust. Maybe the worst of it is that Google+ could have been so good. It could have been so Google. But a series of poor choices, misjudgments, and plain stubbornness resulted in the poor thing being sent alone and friendless into bloody battle with an entrenched and veteran opponent.

As the French General Bosquet remarked upon witnessing the charge of Cardigan’s light brigade: “C’est magnifique, mais ce n’est pas le guerre: c’est de la folie.”


Study: Enterprises Want More Marketing Data, But They Don’t Know What To Do With It

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Online marketers and advertising are getting access to more and more data, but that’s not enough, according to the 2012 Digital Marketing 2.0 Study commissioned by ad company DataXu.

More than 350 “enterprise decision makers” in management, marketing, communications, digital, IT and social media were surveyed, and 75 percent of them said that data will help them improve their businesses. However, 58 percent said they didn’t have the skills and technology needed to analyze marketing data, while more than 70 percent said the same about customer data.

“We know about Facebook and Google and other Internet service companies leading the charge in dealing with big data,” DataXu co-founder and CEO Mike Baker told me. Other large companies know “they need to get in the game,” but “they don’t have the training or the tools to actually realize these efficiencies.”

Perhaps related, 90 percent of respondents said that digital marketing can reduce customer acquisition costs, but 46 percent said they don’t have the tools to communicate those benefits to management.

When the respondents were asked about the biggest obstacle to the growth of digital marketing, they pointed to the lack of a single platform that reaches across all channels. With its online marketing tools, DataXu is tackling this problem, but Baker said his company hasn’t quite covered every avenue that marketers  need help with — they want tools that aren’t just “multi-channel” but “omni-channel”.

“An equal challenge is ease-of-use — how to bring the power of big data people who have never taken a stats class in their life,” he said.

The study was conducted by social media consultancy Human 1.0 and nonprofit Society for New Communications Research. You can download the related whitepaper here, and sign up for the related webinar, scheduled for March 29, here.


FamilyLeaf Brings Your Kin Together In Its Own Private Social Network

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Facebook is on its way to having a billion members, but it’s not always making friends everywhere it goes. Two young men, both aged 19 and in the most recent crop of Y Combinator startups, think they’ve found a gap in the market that has yet to be served that well by the biggest social network: families.

FamilyLeaf was created by childhood friends Wesley Zhao and Ajay Mehta (last seen here spinning out a Y U NO yarn to gain entry into YC; it worked). And it was borne out of a desire to have an easy-to-use online space for you and your relations that address some key “misuse” of sites like Facebook — something they say became especially apparent to the two of them after they left for college (respectively Wharton and NYU Stern, where they are now on a leave of absence).

In their view, Facebook doesn’t make it that easy for families to have a private network, and it’s not very straightforward to create silos to share things with some people (like your friends) but not others (like your family). On top of that, there are many who refuse to join Facebook because of wider Facebook/privacy concerns (and I’m not arguing either side of that here, just stating a fact).

Yes, there are plenty of other sites that have tried to address the family social networking angle, but what’s attractive about FamilyLeaf is that for now, it’s free to use and very easy to get started.

Once you activate a FamilyLeaf network, you can use it as a kind of private, centralized digital locker: you can share contact information, photos, and post messages to your family. And while you can do all that through the site’s homepage, you can also, more simply, update the page by sending to an email address (the site links it up automatically based on the email address). Mehta tells me that email uploading was key to developing the site because they found that this is how many families share photos and other information already these days.

Photos currently can come from Facebook, Instagram, Flickr, Picasa, or from a user’s hard drive by way of Chute. A family administrator controls each group, and users can be a part of more than one family. Mehta for example has three: his mom’s, dad’s and stepdad’s families each have separate networks on FamilyLeaf spanning the U.S., Europe and India.

In addition to Zhao and Mehta’s own families, other Y Combinator founders have signed on, too. They’ve found, so far, that the site has been particularly resonant with those who have a lot of long-distance connections, probably because it’s that much harder to keep up with people when they’re in different timezones.

On a more personal level, that really resonated with me. It’s not often that I come across new services that seem to speak to my life at the moment, but this company seems to have done that with this long-distance family pitch. (I was born in Moscow, Russia; grew up across four cities in the U.S.; and now live in London and have started my own family here. My parents are still in the U.S., though; and my extended family still in Russia. My in-laws are in a different place altogether: France. Very far-flung.) I had to take a closer look.

So I’m giving the site a whirl myself. So far, in the handful of family members that I’ve invited since yesterday, I’ve had a couple of responses, very positive ones. Pictures and the rest will need to come on a day when I’m not quite so busy with work.

But that’s before I’ve even started trying to think of how to invite people like my two crazy aunts in Moscow, Kira and Natasha. What about them?

The founders say that they have designs on how to address that — that is, bring in even those who are nowhere near the Internet grid. “We want to bring in older generations,” says Zhao. He declined to go into details of how that would work but says it would involve “merging the worlds of snail mail and email.”

Apart from the ambitious idea of trying to bridge familial digital divides — which would really be cool if achievable — I can see other potential in this service. For example, incorporating video and voice calling, or even livestreams of family events for those who can’t attend them. There is also the possibility of bringing in APIs to offer other kinds of services, such as plane and hotel bookings. In other words, if privacy and how your information is shared is one of the issues with Facebook they are trying to address, you can see the potential for business models that don’t center around advertising, but around value-added services.

They are also on the way to making the site more internationally-friendly. There are already versions in Chinese, Hindi, Greek, Russian, French, Spanish and Italian, in addition to English.


Condom Or Android Handset Name?

Condom-or-Android

Android phone makers are flooding the market with handsets. If you can’t beat the iPhone in quality, beat it in quantity. But with that comes a problem: They have run out of marketable names. “What phone did you just buy, friend?” “Oh, you know, the new Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket HD LTE 32GB Special Edition.”

What’s in a Name blog just posted this fun graph comparing condom names and Android phones. As you can see, most swing both ways and where there isn’t crossover, like in the condom called Tingle, it’s not that much of a stretch to imagine the name used — the Samsung Galaxy Tingle. The graph also points out some huge opportunities for condom makers; the Trojan Hero would probably be a bigger success than the HTC Hero.

On the same thought, Yinzcam released the Android Phone Name Generator late last year. This fun little web app spits out potential Android handset names like HTC Hero Plus 3D E Prime and Samsung Wildfire Touch E G1 Z. Apparently it’s also applicable to condoms as well.


With Another $1.5M, Appboy Launches App Management Platform, Hootsuite CEO Joins Board

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App developers want to make kick ass applications that users want to download, and — let me go out on a limb here — they also want to make money. Monetizing apps can be tough, but with a more complete picture of how their users are interacting with their app, the opportunities to bring in more revenue become clearer — as does the way to better user experiences. Back in November, we covered Appboy, a startup on a mission to enable app developers to expand, engage, and better understand their user base — and, in turn, make more money.

The New York City-based startup had just closed a $1 million round of seed funding, led by Blumberg Capital, with participation from Metamorphic Ventures, Accelerator Ventures, Bullpen Capital and T5 Capital. Today, the company is announcing an additional $1.5 million in follow-on seed funding led by the very same cast of investors.

Why the quick follow-on investment? According to Appboy CEO Mark Ghermezian, the startup’s private beta tested its platform with 40 developers, and those developers represented several million users from over 12 different countries — and multiple different categories in the App Store. And that’s the key, the CEO says, that its platform tested well with developers with sizable user bases, providing some early validation that the platform could indeed be scalable and category agnostic.

As to some background for those unfamiliar: Appboy is building an integrated management platform for mobile app developers, including a user-facing mobile SDK and an online dashboard for developers. Simply put, the SDK can be quickly integrated into host apps, allowing developers to provide CRM tools, encourage social sharing, run social campaigns, and more easily cross-promote their apps. Through the dashboard, app developers can share news and alerts with users, view analytics, manage their social media presence, and reply to feedback from end users.

Appboy’s dashboard combines both internal metrics with that of third-party providers like Klout, Facebook, and Twitter. The end goal here is to give app developers a sense of just how valuable each of their users are, so that if they’ve just submitted feedback, taken part in a promotion, or posted to your Facebook wall, the dashboard will automatically include info on their usage statistics and sharing history, including information from third parties about their interests, behavior, and social influence.

Allowing developers to manage their Facebook and Twitter presence from the dashboard is a new feature for Appboy, and enables them to push news and alerts to social networks as well as the “in-app news section” of the Appboy SDK. This obviously puts Appboy squarely in the realm of social CRM tools, and along with the news of their new funding, Appboy is also announcing that it is adding Hootsuite CEO and co-founder Ryan Holmes to its advisory board.

For those unfamiliar, Hootsuite is a popular social media management platform for businesses that lets users manage campaigns across multiple social networks from one dashboard. As Appboy brings social CRM management to mobile app developers, CEO Mark Ghermezian tells us that he thinks having Holmes on board can be a big leg up to help the company define what works and what doesn’t when it comes to managing customer relationships on social networks.

When we first covered Appboy in November, the startup was just entering private beta. Today, along with its new funding, the team is opening up its public beta. Developers can register for the Appboy SDK here.

Appboy remains iOS-only at this point, but in the next couple of months, the CEO says, Appboy will be using its follow-on funding to accelerate its arrival on Android, along with releasing some advanced CRM tools for app developers, as well as monetization options through cross-promotion. In regard to this last feature, Appboy is planning to do this through CPI and CPC, as it builds distribution among users through the apps integrating its platform, as well as through a “Sponsored Apps” feature within the “Explore Tab” of its SDK.

And, of course, last but not least, Appboy is also also ramping up hiring.


Going After SMBs, Mobile Website Maker DudaMobile Raises $6M Series B

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DudaMobile, a company which helps convert existing websites into mobile-optimized versions, has just raised $6 million in Series B funding. The round was led by Pitango Venture Capital, an Israeli-based VC firm which has investments in fring, Shaker, VideoSurf, Pageonce, Boxee and others.

The startup, which began life as a white label offering before making its self-serve platform available to businesses last year, says it plans to use the additional funding to expand its engineering and marketing teams, with a special focus on targeting its products towards the SMB market.

As a part of the new round, Pitango’s Eitan Bek will join DudaMobile’s board of directors. Previously, DudaMobile had raised funding from other investors, including board chairman Oren Zeev, StubHub founder Jeff Flhur and Audible.com CEO Don Katz. To date, the company has raised $8.3 million.

In August, DudaMobile launched a self-serve platform for website conversions which allows website owners to instantly create mobile sites. However, unlike some competitors’ products, the tool doesn’t just build a mobile site, it builds one that stays in sync with the desktop-optimized version as changes are applied. The freemium offering creates sites that works on all smartphones, including iOS, Android, BlackBerry and Windows Phone.

At the time of the launch, the company said it had over 175,000 websites hosted on its platform, 35% of which were small business sites.

In January, the company reported crossing the 1 million mobile websites mark. And today, DudaMobile is reporting that it recently broke 1.4 million websites built and hosted on its platform, and since the beginning of 2012, its user base has grown by more than 100,000 new users each month.

The company is also hinting at a “very exciting partnership” in the works, which it plans to announce in early April. According to VP of Marketing Dennis Mink, the company can’t say anything about the news yet, but describes it as “a biggie for a startup like us.”

The startup already has partnerships in place with several companies, including Webs.com, Logoworks by HP, AT&T, Yahoo, eniro and more. When DudaMobile’s platform is used by partners, in some cases, it’s integrated into their own backend website creation platforms. Other times, it’s made available as a white label offering.

Pricing for its newer self-serve platform, meanwhile, starts at $0 for a certain number of pages and smaller amount of bandwidth. The premium plan is $9/month, while the pro option is $499/first year then $9/month. Part of the funding will go to augment this platform, too, the company says.


Zoho Debuts New Android, iOS Apps At Zoholics User Conference

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The team behind web-based productivity suite Zoho is in the middle of hosting their Zoholics user conference in San Francisco, and in between all the panels and presentations, they’ve taken the opportunity to talk a bit about their plans in the mobile space.

“Mobile is going to be one of the most important focus areas for the company this year,” said Zoho evangelist Raju Vegesna. Their approach, it would seem, is to further expand their presence in the mobile space, and they’ve already begun by pulling back the curtains on a handful of new mobile apps.

Despite being the most widely-used smartphone OS in the country, Android hasn’t historically received much Zoho love. To date, there has been only one Zoho app in the Google Play Store, but Zoho has just bolstered their Android lineup with two new additions — Zoho Docs and Zoho CRM. The Zoho Docs app allows users to upload and share (but not edit) documents with coworkers and team members, while Zoho CRM provides users read/write access to their full vault of customer information, accounts, leads, and more.

Zoho also comes bearing good news for users of their online project management service, as they’ve unveiled a new Projects app. Previously, users on-the-go had to rely on the company’s mobile website, but users can now use the native app to create/manage tasks, monitor time spent, and jot down/record notes to keep all team members on the same page.

Zoho CRM is already live in the Google Play Store with Zoho Docs to join it any time now, but the iOS Projects app is still in submission limbo pending Apple’s approval. The apps themselves can all be had for the low, low price of free… though there’s a bit of a catch involved. See, the apps themselves don’t cost anything, but they can only be used with a $3/month mobile subscription.


Car Insurance Comparison Site Leaky Relaunches After Insurance Company Shutdown

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Last August, Y Combinator-backed Leaky had one of those “good news, bad news” startup launches. The good news — the launch got plenty of attention, and (thanks in part to some coverage from TechCrunch), the site attracted 10 times as much traffic as expected, according to co-founder Jason Traff. The bad news — that attracted the attention of the insurance companies, who sent Leaky cease-and-desist letters.

The problem? In order to compare the insurance prices you’d pay with different providers, Leaky was scraping the data directly from the insurance companies’ websites. It sounds like Traff wasn’t entirely surprised by the letters (“We understood their objections and complied with them,” he says now), but he thought Leaky would have more time to fly under-the-radar while it figured out the best way to get its data. However, the high-profile launch made that impossible, and the site went offline after four days.

Now Leaky is back, and it’s offering price comparisons based on a new data source — the regulatory filings that car insurance companies have to file with the government. Using those filings, the company has created a model that predicts, based on your personal details, how much each insurance provider will charge.

That means Leaky is no longer getting its prices directly from the providers, but Traff says the new model is making predictions that fall within 3 percent of the actual prices. And he says the new approach has actually improved the site, allowing it to create new predictions in real-time as you input more data or update your information. If you’re going to switch from a truck to a Nissan, or move from San Francisco to Palo Alto, Calif., the Leaky model can predict how your insurance costs will change. The data is based on California filings for now, but Leaky plans to expand to other states.

The company also says that by looking at the data and using the model, it has uncovered some random-but-interesting facts about insurance costs:

  • Getting a hybrid car will cost you about as much as if you got divorced.
  • Marijuana possession is worse than a hit-and-run resulting in death and a separate count of ‘illegal transportation’ of explosives.
  • Driving while your license is suspended/revoked has the same weight as vehicular manslaughter.

When asked which companies actually sent cease-and-desist letters, Traff declines to say: “Our relationships with the major carriers has gotten much friendlier and we’ve moved past all of those issues.”


Design Community Colourlovers Acquires Forrst

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The 500 Startups-backed dev and design community Forrst has been acquired by Colourlovers, a similarly-focused creative design community. This is the second site from Forrst founder Kyle Bragger which is coming to a close – his online marketplace TinyProj previously ended operations in January. However, in the former case, the site was being shut down with users transitioned to another service, while Forrst is reportedly the subject of an acquisition.

Forrst was originally created as a side project back in 2010, but soon became popular with the web developer and design crowd. In March of last year, the company raised $205,000 in seed funding from Dave McClure’s 500 Startups, Gary & AJ Vaynerchuk, Nate Westheimer, Sahil Lavingia, Adam Schwartz, and Jim Sokoloff.

The site served as a forum where users could share designs and code, receive feedback from other developers, ask questions or post about design topics. Members also have profiles at “Forrst.me” URLs, which offer links to Forrst posts, Twitter, GitHub, and Tumblr accounts.

According to PandoDaily, which reported on news of the acquisition this morning, the combined resources of both companies will continue to serve the design community, while also functioning as a revenue-generating business. For what it’s worth, Forrst was on its way to doing that as well – at the time of its seed funding, 10% of its accounts were “premium” accounts charging $9/month. However, Colourlovers has been around for longer – 7 years, in fact – giving it a head start in the space. The site now has nearly 1.5 million users who have shared over 5 million colors, 2 million palettes, 2 million patterns, and nearly 160,000 templates.

The company is also further ahead in terms of funding – it raised $1 million in May 2011 from investors including Atlas Venture, Morado Ventures, Founder Collective, Charles River Ventures, 500 Startups, Seraph Group & Zelkova Ventures, Matt Mullenweg, Alexis Ohanian, Don Hutchison, Dharmesh Shah, Jared Friedman, and Shawn Bercuson.

Colourlovers’ founders are now also working on something called “Creative Market,” which will serve as an online marketplace for digital goods, including fonts, icons, templates, and more.

The company describes the market like so:

Creative Market is the next piece of our mission that will help creatives easily access a wealth of beautiful design content for their projects. Whether it’s finding a unique vector pattern for a textile, the perfect font with personality for a new logo, or any other kind of digital creative content that helps you produce something amazing.

Our friends at Etsy.com empowered the handmade goods revolution. We believe we can do the same for mousemade goods.

No word yet on the acquisition terms or how the two sites will combine their resources going forward.


Blurtt Co-Founder Jeanette Cajide Explains Why We Need Another Photo App

HKS Talent show

Blurtt is a photo sharing app with a twist – you can add funny captions to your photos before you share them (a little like Hipster, but not) and essentially turn your dull life into LOL life. I spoke with founder Jeanette Cajide about the process of building an app from the ground up and how important it is to have a strong pivot.

The app originally was supposed to let you create and send real postcards from a print shop in Dallas, but as the founding team assessed the cost – and the competition – they built a way to have a bit of goofy fun (and serious fun if you want to get all mopey in your captions) with photos you take on the go.

TC: Tell me about yourself and your team? What did you do before this? Is this a full-time thing?

Jeanette: Blurtt is a company that is run by a Cuban-American, with another founder named Kuba Tymula who is not Cuban but Polish, and another founder named Laura Gurasich who has many skills – one of them is serving as my English-As-A-Second Language translator, as I learned English watching “Sesame Street”. We all met in at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management. We did not off-shore a single line of code for Blurtt – it was all built in Dallas.

Truth about what I was doing before: I was working to lift the Cuban-US embargo before joining Blurtt, but Fidel Castro wouldn’t take my calls. I’d have to be mostly incompetent to be considered a good diplomat so I bolted and decided to live my dream of being an entrepreneur.

And yes, this is most definitely full-time for me. The rest of the team comes in when needed. We run a lean operation.

TC: Blurtt used to be a postcard creation service that actually sent postcards to people. Now you can add captions to photos and share them with friends. It’s definitely changed a lot over the past few months. Why did you pivot?

J: I shit my pants when Postagram launched. I am a huge fan of Matt Brezina, and Postagram was funded, so I had to make a decision within a day. Do we keep trying the postcard biz or pivot? I was still stuck in fundraising mode with no product. I saw writing on the wall. When Apple announced postcards I was glad we pivoted. We love Postagram and hope to see blurtts in their system someday.

TC: Why another photo sharing service? Don’t we have too many?

J: Yikes John. Calm down. Blurtt is not a photo sharing service. We are a communications tool – we enable you to make a visual statement about what it is you want to say or feel. Yes we are using images but Blurtt is about taking the image in your head or heart (from our image search engine powered by Bing and Flickr) and turning it into a digital expression with your own words. You can also use your own pictures. Like this guy who made me laugh this morning.

TC: What have you learned building Blurtt?

J: Building and deploying an app is like learning to build an airplane in the air. Our best practice is to keep calm and drink margaritas when things go well and beer when things don’t go so well. It keeps everyone happy. I am also lucky I have the best team of engineers anyone can ask for. They are my secret weapon. The key thing I learned is you cannot create awesome stuff if you are always asking for permission.

TC: Why should anyone download this?

J: For starters, Blurtt will put therapists out of business. Just think of all the crap you can get off your chest in one minute increments. Happy, sad, frustrated, elated. People are blurtting consecutively sometimes. All these human emotions you feel all day. And best it can be easily shared via Twitter or Facebook, so rather than making your status updates boring as hell – you can increase engagement by rocking out an awesome blurtt that people will want to share with their friends and like on Facebook. Blurtts can go viral pretty fast. We are waiting for it but it’s only 6 days old so I’d give it some more time.

TC: What’s the favorite Blurtt you’ve seen so far?

J: Right now I’m loving this one.

I am a political junkie. I watch C-SPAN. That’s my pick up line at bars. I’m also still single.


FTC Worried About Big Online Platforms, Only Sort Of Means Facebook and Google

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The Federal Trade Commission just released a new report laying out its current thinking on Internet privacy. In some cases, the commission recommends new legislation, while in others it just want to hold more workshops.

The FTC previously released a “privacy framework” in December 2010. The framework outlined three principles that the commission wants companies to follow, including “privacy by design” (which means thinking about privacy at every stage of product development), simplified consumer choice, and greater transparency. It made perhaps its biggest splash by endorsing a “Do Not Track” mechanism in Web browsers. The FTC didn’t invent the idea, but DNT has gained more momentum since it made the endorsement.

In the new report (view or download the PDF here), the FTC includes five main action items:

  1. Do Not Track — The report notes that “significant progress” has been made in making Do Not Track a reality. “However, the work is not done.” The FTC says it will work with organizations including browser vendors, the Digital Advertising Alliance, and The World Wide Web Consortium “to complete implementation of an easy-to use, persistent, and effective” system.
  2. Mobile — The FTC wants mobile companies to provide “short, meaningful disclosures”, and it will host a workshop on May 30 in the hopes of that it “will spur further industry self-regulation.”
  3. Data Brokers — The FTC supports legislation that would give consumers access to the information that data brokers hold about them. It also calls for those brokers to “explore creating a centralized website” showing who is collecting what data.
  4. Large Platform Providers — The FTC report says that as Internet Service Providers, operating systems, Web browsers, and social media services try to “comprehensively track consumers’ online activities,” they raise “heightened privacy concerns,” and the commission plans to hold a workshop later this year to look at the issue. For now, it seems like the commission is least concerned about the final category. The report says that even though “companies such as Google and
    Facebook are expanding their reach rapidly, they currently are not so widespread that they could track a consumer’s every movement across the Internet,” so they don’t raise “the same level of privacy concerns.”
  5. Promoting Enforceable Self-Regulatory Codes — The FTC says it will participate in the Department of Commerce’s efforts to build sector-specific codes of conduct, and that if those codes are developed, the commission will “view adherence to such codes favorably in connection with its law enforcement work.”


Keen On… Lori Andrews: How Google And Facebook Are Intermediaries For The Government [TCTV]

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Every day, it seems, there is a new scandal about privacy and social networks. And few people have a better understanding of social networks’ threat to our privacy and liberty than the Chicago-based legal scholar, technologist and best-selling thriller writer, Lori Andrews. In her latest book, “I Know Who You Are And I Saw What You Did: Social Networks and the Death of Privacy”, Andrews argues that social networks like Facebook and Google+ are, indeed, destroying our privacy.

Google and Facebook are “intermediaries for the government”, Andrews told me when she came into our San Francisco studio earlier this month. Much of their business model, she insists, is based on “deception” – particularly, Andrews says, the way in which online aggregators like Google or Axiom are profiting from all of our personal data. But “the pendulum is swinging”, Andrews notes. One the one hand, she says, more and more Internet users are waking up to the threat of social networks; and, on the other, she is encouraged by the emergence of technology startups dedicated to protecting rather than exploiting our privacy.

So is Andrews right: are Google and Facebook really “intermediaries” for the government?


Twitter Launches Advertising Program For Small Business In Partnership With American Express

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Twitter is continuing its rollout of advertising initiatives, with today’s launch of its new program for small businesses, which is being launched in partnership with American Express. Originally announced last month, American Express merchants and cardholders are now being alerted to Twitter’s new advertising opportunities, which were kicked off by a related promotion in which the first 10,000 Cardmembers and merchants received $100 in free Twitter ads.

Today, those first 10,000 will be notified that they can get started in building their ad campaigns. For Twitter users, this news means more ads from smaller stores, brands and chains, which will accompany the now-familiar Promoted Tweets, Trends, and profiles that have historically highlighted both national and international companies, like Samsung or Starbucks, for example.

According to a company blog post, the SMB program is starting off small, and will gradually increase the number of participating merchants over the coming weeks. Advertisers participating in the program will have access to all of Twitter’s Promoted Products, which will allow them to promote their Twitter accounts, place promotions and messages in Twitter timelines and promote tweets which will then appear at the top of Twitter searches.

The expansion of Twitter’s advertising program coincides with other changes the company has made over the past few weeks, specifically those that have brought more of these ads to mobile clients. Earlier in March, Twitter announced an expansion of Promoted Tweets on mobile, allowing advertisers to target recipients by both interest and device.  This followed a previous announcement which saw the arrival of additional Promoted Products on iOS and Android, specifically Promoted Accounts and Promoted Tweets.

SMBs choosing to advertise using these new options will be able to pay per follower for Promoted Accounts and per engagement (click, retweet, reply, and favorite) for Promoted Tweets, says Twitter. They’ll also be able to target the world, specific countries, or even specific U.S. metro areas.

Businesses that have not yet signed up to participate can still do so now here, and will be alerted when the option opens up further.