Tag Archive | "khosla ventures"

Ex-Googler Ben Ling Brings His Operations Experience To Khosla Ventures

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Former Badoo COO and ex-Googler Ben Ling has joined Khosla Ventures, according to sources. Ling, who has held senior operations roles for a number of big companies in the mobile and Internet space, has been added to a growing team at Vinod Khosla’s venture firm. (Update: Khosla Ventures just confirmed Ling has joined, starting this week.)

Ling most recently served as COO of Badoo, where he was hired to oversee product, engineering, partnerships, and business operations at the company. Ling joined Badoo in May 2012, but he left after only about six months.

Prior to Badoo, Ling spent a number of years at Google, where his last role included overseeing images, videos, books, news, and finance as its senior director of search products and local business products. At YouTube, Ling was senior director of partnerships and platform, where he was responsible for music, movies, sports and news, as well as mobile, TV and API partnerships. In his first role at Google, he oversaw the company’s e-commerce products, including Google Checkout and Product Search.

At Facebook, he served as the director of Facebook Platform, working on developer relations at the fledgling social network. There he helped build Facebook Connect, which is the social network’s hook into a number of third-party websites.

In addition to his senior operations roles, Ling has also been an active angel investor and advisor to startups. Recent investments include Fab.com, Palantir, Square, PracticeFusion, and Quora. Ling has also held an advisory position at Pinterest and Pulse.

In a conversation with TechCrunch, Ling told us that most of his experience as an entrepreneur has been in operations roles, helping companies like Google and Facebook scale their businesses both in terms of users and bringing in revenues. Meanwhile, over the last four years, he’s been working as an angel investor, identifying great products and teams and helping them to scale.

“In terms of thinking about my next steps, and thinking about what I could do next, I wanted to maximize the impact I could have by helping entrepreneurs to grow their businesses,” Ling said. He said that the opportunity at Khosla Ventures enables him to do that, since there are a lot of “parallels and similarities” to what he was doing as an angel investor — evaluating teams and talent, helping companies scale and with their hiring strategies.

Ling said that we can probably expect to see him make investments in a lot of the same areas that he’s worked in previously — that includes companies focused on e-commerce or shopping, developer networks, search, finance, and local. He’s also had some experience with three-sided ecosystem businesses, such as the Facebook platform’s network of users, developers and advertisers.

Of course, Ling isn’t the only operations specialist to join Khosla Ventures. His hire comes just a few months after former Square COO Keith Rabois joined the firm.

Part of the reason Khosla Ventures has been interested in bringing on entrepreneurs with that type of experience is that they can provide guidance for startups who need operational experience. Rabois, who is now 10 weeks in at Khosla Ventures, said, “Our organizing philosophy is to provide assistance to entrepreneurs and help them to build the most interesting companies they can… It’s about understanding what entrepreneurs need is less capital and more formative advice. Every time we evaluate a company we ask whether we can help this entrepreneur build something special.”

Both Ling and Rabois say that they’ve been impressed with the quality of entrepreneurs and the quality of the Khosla Ventures team as it works with those startups. With that in mind, Rabois said he’s really excited about building several big businesses as part of the Khosla Ventures team.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Neverware Raises $1M To Keep Schools’ Computers Quick Like Lightning

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There is no sadder moment than the one where you realize it’s time to upgrade your computer. The load times are too slow, the battery no longer holds a charge, and it’s just too damn heavy. Now, imagine a school with dozens of outdated computers, and think just how bad that moment of realization can really be.

Neverware, a company based out of NY, is aiming to change all that with a turnkey solution that automatically boosts performance of old computers for a low monthly fee. Obviously, demand for this type of service is high, especially in the education industry, which is why Neverware has just closed a $1 million round from investors that include Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, General Catalyst, Collaborative Fund, and Nihal Mehta.

Founder Jonathan Hefter started Neverware back in 2011 and launched in January 2013 with around $600K in seed funding. Since then, the company has been working to evangelize the product to NYC schools, and the response has been great. According to Hefter, Neverware’s latest seed round is somewhat of an emergency raise, considering that the demand from schools is much higher than expected.

Hefter explained that they expected to sign on with between five and seven schools for the first semester, starting in January. However, they’ve blown way past that number and seen around 3x the customer sign-ups. According to Neverware, most of the new seed round will go toward smart engineering hires, as Hefter looks to double the seven-man team with more employees who care about what Neverware is doing.

Neverware works by setting up a Juicebox 100 in the schools. That piece of hardware integrates with the school’s network to bring automation and intelligence to the system. The Neverware virtualization technology then boosts performance to each computer, giving kids the access they need to actually get things done.

Schools pay an adjustable fee per month, per computer, and the Juicebox comes free.

“There is a huge challenge in deploying software on appliances across a wide variety of networks that we do not control,” said Hefter. “In order to be a reliable solution, we engineer an incredible amount of intelligence and automation into our system that allows it to function in many types of network environments that schools might have and recover from a wide range of network-related issues, without any associated downtime. These are engineering challenges that you simply don’t face when you’re running a website on uniform Amazon instances in the cloud.”

For now, Neverware is focused on expanding within the greater New York area, and will eventually expand beyond that into new regions.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Simpler Raises $1.2M From Andreessen Horowitz, Kleiner Perkins, Khosla To Make Employee Onboarding Paperless

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Simpler, a new startup that wants to disrupt employee onboarding, is launching today and announcing $1.25 million in funding from Andreessen Horowitz, Kleiner Perkins, Khosla Ventures, SV Angel, Data Collective, and Formation8.

The startup, which is the brainchild of gaming startup TinyCo co-founder (who left the company two years ago) Ian Spivey, and Ivan Kim and Bo Shi, is a solution for the new-hire paperwork problem. As Spivey explains, when he hired people at TinyCo there was always the requisite huge stack of papers that new employees had to fill out on the first day, including tax forms, health care forms, employee agreements and more. He said he wished he had an easy onboarding tool. He adds that the process is the same for startups or for Fortune 500 companies.

So when he left TinyCo he set about trying to create a cloud-based tool that managed new-hire paperwork without the paper, essentially creating paperless onboarding. Simpler, which is in private beta, digitizes all the forms that companies need for employee onboarding.

The customer sends Simpler their current on-boarding packet and Simpler digitizes it. HR admins can then enter a new employee’s name, start date and email, and select the type of packet they’ll get (e.g. full time vs. contractor), and the employee will receive an e-mail with a link to their employee portal, which contains all the docs they need to fill out.

Employees then review the documents and sign the forms via an e-signature feature. The documents are submitted for approval, and the HR reps can see what areas where action is required or fields are missing. Administrators can also track employee progress.

Finally, completed documents are sent to third-party service providers like payroll and benefits brokers. The eventual output is a set of documents in a PDF that can be emailed, as well. The workflow as a whole is simple and easy, and doesn’t waste employee or HR time.

As Spivey explains, the company is focusing on a specific part of human capital management, which is a multi-billion dollar opportunity.

Pricing is still being determined, we’re told.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Zynga CIO Debra Chrapaty Named Nirvanix CEO, Sees Analytics Play For Storage Company, Continued Rivalry With AWS

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Zynga CIO Debra Chrapaty has a new job as the CEO at Nirvanix, the Khosla Ventures backed enterprise storage company that she expects to further compete with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and extend into the business analytics market.

Chrapaty initially joined Nirvanix last November as chairwoman of the board when Khosla became lead investor in the company that is also funded by Intel Capital. She replaces Dru Borden, who will remain a part of the Nirvanix leadership team as senior vice president of planning & development and remain as a board member Chrapaty will start her new job in April.

Chrapaty led Zynga’s build out of its infrastructure. While there, Zynga became AWS largest customer before she directed the build out of the company’s own gaming cloud.

Prior to Zynga, Chrapaty worked at Cisco, helping direct the development of its collaboration platform. Before Cisco, she worked at Microsoft where she said in an email she built out Windows Azure.

Nirvanix has earned a place in the market for its capability to store petabytes of data. Chrapaty said the company builds out storage infrastructures for the cloud, on-premise or hybrid. Its technology replaces more traditional technologies like magnetic tape and EMC/ NetApp boxes.

She said the company has an opportunity to build out an analytics stack. With that in mind, I asked if Nirvanix also plans to offer compute capabilities? She said she need to explore what an analytics stack would look like.

Chrapaty echoes what is becoming a roar. Fortune 1000 companies are embracing the cloud. And storage needs a home.

That’s a good thing for Nirvanix but also AWS, Windows Azure, Box, Dropbox and the host of other companies looking to carve a niche in an increasingly commoditized storage market.

(Lead Photo credit: Seattle Post-Intelligencer)

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

“Venture Assistance”: A Philosophical View Of What Boards Should And Should Not Do

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Editor’s note: Legendary investor Vinod Khosla is the founder of Khosla Ventures. You can follow him on Twitter @vkhosla.

Most VCs pitch their venture firms as value added to a company’s entrepreneurial founders. Personally, I think leading VC firms do a pretty good job of being supportive of their companies, and most entrepreneurs funded by good funds like their investors. But, on the question of “value added,” most venture capitalists, even among the leading firms, are pretty passive and ineffective when it comes to assisting companies. In my view, many if not most of them haven’t done enough in their careers to earn the right to advise entrepreneurs, a job I consider laden with responsibility.

A lot of VCs, especially those from the more financially oriented firms, do more harm to startups than good when they get themselves on company boards without ever having built a company themselves, or seeing one from the inside. What value can a VC as board member add to a company? We constantly ask our young guys (who are monitored pretty closely if they go on a board and are in learning versus advising mode and mostly are at Khosla Ventures for three years before they go out and be entrepreneurs themselves) is “What have you done to earn the right to advise entrepreneurs?” I don’t want entrepreneurs to get inexperienced advice on important matters.

Keith Rabois

Our belief in bringing the best resources to our companies is why we’re very excited about the newest addition to the Khosla Ventures team: Keith Rabois. While recruiting him to join us, what I kept asking myself wasn’t whether he’d be a great investor (which he is), but rather whether he’d be sought out by entrepreneurs as a mentor, advisor, and board member. Almost all our reference-checking was done with entrepreneurs (successful and aspiring, seasoned and first-timers), not other investors. The reference checks repeatedly elicited feedback like “He asks the toughest questions”; “He pushes me the most and makes me think”; “He’s always there when I need help”; “Most valuable among all my board members and advisors”; “Doesn’t just tell me what I want to hear”; “Can imagine the future”; “Helps with recruiting”; and on and on.

As an entrepreneur and operator at PayPal, LinkedIn, Slide, Square, and other places, and as a mentor to many startups over the years, Keith has earned the right to advise entrepreneurs. He knows, through PayPal and Square, what growth looks and feels like, and he knows what entrepreneurial struggles feel like through his experience at Slide. He knows how to advise entrepreneurs on hiring/firing, running teams, managing funding, when/how to control burn rate, and making other tough management decisions in the real environment of startups. He’s a practical hands-on kind of guy in growing companies, and he fits Khosla Ventures’ “venture assistance model” of people who have earned the right to advise entrepreneurs.

That leads me to one of my favorite questions around younger entrepreneurial companies: What is the role of a board member?

The right advisor asks the questions you never knew were important.

Good board members add many kinds of strategic value that’s critical to building a successful company, and they do it in multiple ways. Most of us don’t know what we don’t know when operating in a new area. The right advisor asks the questions you never knew were important. They serve as guides, helping you navigate the difficult road of building a company from the ground up, spotting things that an entrepreneur might otherwise miss (risks and opportunities alike). They carry with them an extensive network that they can bring to bear on all the different problems and challenges that might crop up along the way, whether it’s finding a critical hire with the perfect match of skills and experience or getting a company a make-or-break meeting with a decision-maker at a potential marquee customer.

At Khosla Ventures, our “operating partners” are part of our philosophy of offering real targeted help, whether it’s teaching entrepreneurs how to build recruiting orgs that get the best talent or helping craft marketing strategies around new product launches. Good board members also bring different skills and points of view, developed though years of experiences (and failures). They force companies to address the toughest make-or-break issues before it’s too late, and they push entrepreneurs to greater heights than they might reach themselves. Having this kind of advisor as your coach is like turbo-charging your entrepreneurial engine from the sidelines.

Entrepreneurs usually deal with many problems at the same time, and being a CEO is a very lonely job. They’re often so buried in the details, whether things are going great or poorly, that they fail to look up over the horizon. The job of a good board member and advisor (I use these terms interchangeably) is to help teams raise their heads and spot oncoming problems, scope out hidden opportunities, and get a broader perspective. If things are going great, anticipating problems is even more important since overconfidence can kill a company. Challenging the team to think about risks or position some long-term assets can make a big difference in helping an entrepreneur “create” a larger opportunity. Asking questions that an entrepreneur does not want to hear is an equally important role, and having advisors who’ve made mistakes before helps.

I often talk about my lessons from years of screwing up. The value of diversity in a team and engineering the gene pool of a team to the risks and opportunities it faces are critical factors that good advisors can bring to a first-time entrepreneur. Understanding how to avoid needing to hire a CEO or what to do when you need to hire a CEO are all better informed by a wealth of previous mistakes. I often say I have a larger collection of personal mistakes than most people in the venture business.

How do I measure my partners and myself? If with our advice, prodding and challenging, a team does not expand its opportunity by 2x or more, or if we have not pushed a team to recruit at higher levels than they would have without us or gotten unreachable candidates to consider the company (a company in my view becomes the people it hires), or if we have not helped a team grab opportunities (strategic or tactical big customers) or address risks earlier than they otherwise would have, then we have not added value. We have not done our job.

Our goal isn’t to be the nicest among all investors, but rather to push teams to be as great as they can be, to help them see hard reality and the risks coming their way, and to press them to worry about burn rate or accelerate their spending depending upon the circumstances. By the same token, though we can push teams hard (sometimes other VCs will say we push them too much, but these are the passive VCs along for the ride), we are extremely loyal to companies and entrepreneurs who we are engaged with closely (in especially hard circumstances, more so than most VC firms).

Good entrepreneurship is like having a delicate recipe cooked by an expert chef with ingredients added in the right amounts at the right time.

Even more critically, in almost three decades of being on boards and advising companies, I have never once voted against what a team wants to do, even when I strongly disagree with their choice. I will debate every issue hard and push my point of view but leave the final decision to the team. I don’t believe boards of entrepreneurial private companies should ever vote (except on the one issue of hiring and firing the CEO). If the team doesn’t believe in what the board voted on, then they won’t be successful at implementing it.

The team that spends 80 hours a week working on a company, understanding all the nuances of the hundred things going on, and being responsible for implementing a decision, should make the decision (not the board that drops in casually every six or eight weeks). The more I believe a team is going the wrong way in their approach, the more I will bug them, push them, cajole them, and plead with them, but I always suggest I and other advisors/board members stop short of making the decision for the team.

Decision-making should be a sharp line no board should cross. If a team knows the decision will be left to them, you get much more honest input and feedback, open discussion and vigorous (and sometimes uncomfortable) debate, better understanding of fears and opportunities, and more transparent self-assessments. I find many boards do the opposite by not engaging intimately with teams but still trying to vote on what companies should do. And occasionally, when I find I don’t have good chemistry with a team, I often bow out and let them go their own way and stop being active in the company. Not every relationship is fun and one has to acknowledge that. If a team does not want help, we don’t want to provide it.

In contrast to this personal view of an ideal board, many boards are often polite and agreeable, in many cases to a fault. In one instance, a board I was on did not tell a company (which was well-financed and had $45 million in the bank) that they did not believe in the plan the team was pursuing. The board members were nice, friendly cheerleaders. I was almost isolated in my view. Three years later and after many wasted years of many lives, the company was sold for $3 million and the team was fired almost immediately after the acquisition. I swore I would not let this happen again and have since carried the statement “we prefer brutal honesty to hypocritical politeness” on our website.

Instead of focusing on regular board “governance” (an activity I think is only minimally needed in good startups), I ask CEOs to focus on the most critical and pivotal risks, questions, and opportunities facing the company. Boards should challenge teams to be bigger, better, and more cautious or more ambitious as appropriate, almost to the limit (but no more) of an entrepreneur’s comfort and capability. They should make entrepreneurs think hard and critically. They should have the ability to understand a company’s business well enough to brainstorm strategy in a way the team not only respects but seeks out. I hope every one of my partners brings this to the boards they are on, and I hope entrepreneurs value this as much as I think they should.

Some of the good entrepreneurs we talked to about Keith Rabois told us he was their toughest critic and their hardest questioner, and that made him even more attractive to us at Khosla Ventures. We want entrepreneurs to achieve all they can and avoid as many risks as possible. Good entrepreneurs should want activist, thoughtful, loyal, and experienced board members who are also respectful and deferential without being hypocritical nice guys. Incidentally, the less confident, more self-focused (rather than company mission-focused) an entrepreneur is, the more they prefer to be left alone.

What else can a great board member like Keith bring to the party? Understanding a new space, having the imagination to imagine the possible, and guiding very lean startup-like experiments to move toward those goals while not assuming every strategy will work the first time. Most successful plans go through many twists, turns and evolutions, a fact seldom recognized by linear-thinking, “are you meeting your plan”-type of board members. Real experience working in startups sensitizes a board member to these realities of startup life. Good advisors have startup experience themselves.

Good advisors and board members help entrepreneurs avoid mistakes they might not see because they’re heads down focused on trying to build their business.

Good advisors have also done a lot of hiring and know what to look for. I have seen boards put together naïve, almost clinical hiring specs that look like something out of Business 101. Real life is much more complex, nuanced and flexible, and unless you have made enough mistakes in hiring (I assume I cannot do better than a 66 percent success rate in judging how good a hire will be), you don’t know how to advise a team in my view.

Hiring may be the most critical thing a company does (if you believe as I do that a company “becomes the people they hire”) and experience in “success and failure factors” in recruiting as well as the “credibility to attract the unreachable candidates” becomes among the most important thing a company’s board contributes. I still spend more time recruiting for our companies (even down to individual critical engineers when needed) than any other single activity.

Good advisors and board members help entrepreneurs avoid mistakes they might not see because they’re heads down focused on trying to build their business. Board members should serve as a trusted inner-circle of advisors that motivate company management to self-assess and improve, and good boards help founder CEOs scale by helping them build the right teams to support them. Sometimes companies need to spend time doing down-the-road planning and sometimes they need to focus on just getting stuff done for the next six months. Good boards know the difference, and they know what’s important when.

At Khosla Ventures, we encourage our entrepreneurs to do regular 360 reviews, think about gene-pool engineering, do risk analysis, focus on measurable goal setting, conduct honest competitive analysis, execute RIFLE market analysis when needed, and, most importantly, do rigorous “If-then financial planning.” We call these processes our “standard operating procedures” and, once a quarter, decide for each company at our internal meeting which of these are most relevant to direct a team’s attention to.

Good entrepreneurship is like having a delicate recipe cooked by an expert chef with ingredients added in the right amounts at the right time. The recipe for startup success is tough to intuit on your own without the help of good advisors. Those advisors don’t make decisions for management. Their only role is to assist entrepreneurs by giving honest advice, even when it’s uncomfortable to hear. They’re not there for governance, making decisions or casting votes. They’re there to listen, argue, debate and guide, but leave the final decision to the team that’s going to have to execute it. In the end, advisors should push and challenge without ever making a team feel like they cannot make the final calls or that a board member’s interests diverge from theirs.

We never refer to ourselves as venture capitalists. We try to be “venture assistants.” Getting good advice is much more important than getting funding. It’s much easier to get money than get the right kind of advice. Making all of the judgment calls that running a startup entails is where having the right advisors really matters. There’s a delicate balancing act between technology, innovation, experience, burn rate, and many other factors that are seldom appreciated by people who have not built large, successful companies that started out small. And having the right kind of help to manage that balancing act creates step-function-type changes in a company’s trajectory. It’s the difference between building a hundred-million-dollar business and a billion-dollar business.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

After CEO Departure, Mobile Video Startup Viddy Cuts Staff By More Than A Third

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It was less than a year ago that Viddy was flying high, quoting massive user growth and raising a massive $30 million round of funding from NEA, Goldman Sachs, Khosla Ventures, and Battery Ventures. Now the company is cutting back, as it seeks to regroup and figure out this mobile video thing.

Viddy confirmed that it reduced its workforce, specifically in the areas of marketing and operations. The company has cut 12 positions, which is more than a third of its staff based upon what we’ve heard. Viddy claims that its core engineering team is still in place. The cuts come after the departure of CEO and co-founder Brett O’Brien.

Last year was a whirlwind for the company. In February, Viddy raised $6 million to take on mobile video competitors like Socialcam. Then in May, bolstered by Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram for about a billion dollars, the startup raised another massive $30 million round. But a lot of things have changed since then. Viddy had relied heavily on Facebook’s Open Graph to juice its user numbers ahead of its big funding round early last year. But changes to Facebook’s algorithm mean fewer people discovering the app, which in turn meant stalled user growth.

At the same time, many are beginning to question the whole idea behind an “Instagram for video” in the first place. And the absolute value of Viddy also came into question, as its closest comparable — Socialcam — was acquired by Autodesk for about $60 million, which was well below Viddy’s valuation. The result has been a re-org of the company.

Earlier this month, O’Brien stepped down from day-to-day operations. Rumors have it that part of the reason  was an acquisition offer from Twitter that Viddy declined. But Twitter ended up acquiring Vine and releasing its competing mobile video app instead.

A representative from Viddy sent the following statement about the cuts:

As the board continues to review Viddy’s business, we’ve identified specific ways to streamline costs which include eliminating some positions. These changes will allow the Viddy team to be focused on bringing the most innovative and engaging social mobile video product to market. Viddy has a strong balance sheet and an exciting product roadmap ahead, including an upcoming new product release, and we have the right team in place to execute moving forward.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Khosla-Backed Hampton Creek Foods Launches Beyond Eggs, A Genuinely Convincing Egg Replacer

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Josh Tetrick, founder and CEO of Hampton Creek Foods, isn’t the first person to try to convince people to eat fewer animal products (after all, someone manufactured the Tofurky that I eat every Thanksgiving), but he’s not satisfied with what’s already out there.

“Let’s face it, a lot of vegans have low standards,” Tetrick said — and he’s a vegan himself.

His point: There are plenty of meat and animal product substitutes available, but people usually eat them because they’re vegan/vegetarian, not because the food is particularly good. Tetrick, on the other hand, is hoping to create plant-based foods that are actually better than the animal products they replace. And his company just launched its first product, Beyond Eggs.

This initial version of Beyond Eggs works as an egg replacer in baked goods. After all, Tetrick said, “You don’t eat the Twinkie because of the eggs,” so it’s hard to imagine anyone getting too worked up if they find out that their Twinkie wasn’t made with a plant-based alternative, especially if the Beyond Eggs product is also healthier, cheaper, and results in better-tasting food. (Eventually, Tetrick said he’s hoping to replace the scrambled eggs too, and also to launch other replacement products.)

When I visited the Hampton Creek office in San Francisco, I didn’t actually try any Twinkies, but I did a taste test comparing regular cookies with those that include Beyond Eggs. I didn’t consistently prefer the Beyond Eggs cookies, but I did some of the time. Even when I didn’t, the cookies tasted so similar that it was hard to decide.

Our video tour of the Hampton Creek office should give you some sense of how Tetrick hopes to accomplish his goals. It really feels like several different businesses pushed together — there’s a typical startup office area where everyone’s gathered together on their laptops, but also a lab where scientists test different types of protein, and a kitchen where Hampton Creek products are put to use in cookies, sauces, and more.

Beyond Eggs ingredients include peas, sunflower lecithin, canola, and natural gums. In addition to being vegan, it’s also gluten-free and cholesterol free. You can read more about it here and sign up for a free sample here.

Hampton Creek has attracted the backing of Khosla Ventures, with $2 million raised total.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Cylance, A Cyber Security Data Company Founded By Former McAfee CTO, Raises $15M From Khosla, Fairhaven Capital

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Cylance,a cyber security company founded by former Global McAfee CTO Stuart McClure, has raised $15 million in a round led by Khosla Ventures and Fairhaven Capital.

Cylance uses data to help keep core systems healthy. In particular its focus is on critical infrastructure and the types of threats President Barack Obama mentioned in his State of the Union address last night when he announced he had signed an executive order to protect the nation’s infrastructure from the escalating danger of cyber attacks. and urged the U.S. Congress to pass a Cyber Security bill. McClure, in an interview yesterday, said Obama recognizes that the physical and cyber worlds are coming together. Power grids, utilities, they all are vulnerable to attack. The problem: nobody is fixing it.

McClure said the answer to our troubles is something we have known we could do since the late 1990s. Organizations need to treat its systems like a healthy person treats their body. For instance, getting a flu shot is not the answer to keep from getting sick. Most people who don’t get the flu take care of themselves. They have a good diet, exercise and get enough sleep.

Systems need similar treatment except their nutrients are in the form of data algorithms. Taking preventative measures makes the difference between falling victim to attack and withstanding the virus by showing strength in the core of an organization’s system defenses.

Data represents the nutrients that our systems need to stay healthy. Data, when applied to algorithms, acts as a way for an organization to keep its defenses strong.

Cylance is another example of how data represents the biggest shift for at least the next 20 years. Cylance is using data in not such a different way than Google uses it to develop self-driving cars. Data is at the core of Google’s capability, connecting disparate data points to form patterns that can be used for a car to drive itself down the road. For Cylance, it means using data to form patterns to understand the preventative measures required to keep a water utility safe from attack.

The threat to our infrastructure is not just limited to electrical grids or other high profile infrastructure. Cylance will focus quite a bit on embedded systems, the technologies used in all kinds of medical equipment. These embedded technologies, be they in printers or defibrillators, will increasingly be the subject of attack. And data is the best safeguard.

The biggest problem Cylance will face is not the attackers — it’s the security industry resistant to change and a public apathetic about the risks we face from attacks that could shut off our water or plunge entire regions into darkness. Without those forces engaged, Cylance will only be able to solve a small part of a problem that grows ever wider in scope.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

DB Networks Raises $4.5M From Khosla Ventures For Database Security To Protect Against Malware

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DB Networks has raised $4.5 million in Series B funding from Khosla Ventures for its security platform for real-time advanced database attack detection. The company uses behavior analysis technology to rapidly and automatically detect SQL injection attacks and denial of service attacks.

SQL injection is a code-injection technique that exploits a security vulnerability in an application’s software. Traditional security software uses black lists and white lists to prevent attacks. Apple has a white list of sorts. Apps that get approved for the iPhone are essentially put on a white list. Security software companies will keep black lists of IP addresses to protect their clients from attacks.

DB Networks looks for abnormalities in behavior to protect enterprise environments. The company’s Adaptive Database Firewall has a drop-in, transparent installation, which requires no database or application expertise and provides passive monitoring of all critical databases so dataflow between the application and the database is not compromised.

SQL attacks are on the rise with the advent of social networks. Hackers use sites like Facebook to spread malware that unsuspecting users then carry with them. Attacks happen when these hidden viruses get into enterprise networks.

DB Networks competes with a host of security vendors, including F-Secure, Symantec, McAfee and Trend Micro.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Yahoo Buys Snip.it, The Pinterest-Meets-News Startup, For $10 Million Plus Earnouts

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With Marissa Mayer at the helm, Yahoo is continuing to flex its M&A muscles, with a special focus on startups with smart teams that have made well-designed apps. The latest target: Snip.it, the San Francisco-based startup that created a web application for clipping news articles and arranging them in a visually compelling Pinterest-like format. The deal, which we understand to have been in the works for several weeks now, was first reported this morning by AllThingsD’s Liz Gannes and subsequently confirmed by both Yahoo and Snip.it this afternoon.

We’re hearing that the purchase price was $10 million, plus several million dollars worth of earnouts tied to team retention. All but one of Snip.it’s approximately 10 full-time staffers will be joining Yahoo, a source familiar with the deal says.

The Snip.it app has already been shut down, and users will have the option to download their data for a month from now, until February 21st. The Snip.it team will focus on the “social news” space in their new roles at Yahoo, the company said in a blog post announcing the sale.

The size of the deal, along with the immediately effective shut-down of the service, points to this being a standard “acqui-hire” situation. Snip.it, which first launched in October 2011, had attracted an impressive roster of investors including Khosla Ventures, True Ventures, Charles River Ventures, and SV Angel, but it seems that ultimately its service did not get as much standalone traction as may have been hoped.

That said, the Snip.it app was impressive to see in action, as we saw when we sat down with CEO Ramy Adeeb this past June for a segment on TechCrunch TV. It’s clear that Adeeb, a very sharp young executive with both technical and business chops, was almost certainly a big part of what attracted Yahoo to the company. It will be exciting to see what he comes up with next.

Here is our interview with Adeeb and his hands-on demo of Snip.it from this past summer:


Kim-Mai Cutler contributed reporting to this story.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

May 2013
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