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Robotic Automations

RevenueCat raises $12M Series C as it expands its subscription management to the web | TechCrunch


RevenueCat, a top subscription management platform for apps that monetize via in-app purchases, is now flush with new capital as it expands to the web. The company has closed on a $12 million Series C led by Adjacent, following the launch of a new product, RevenueCat Billing, that allows web app developers to integrate subscription purchases into any website. Later, it will also support Roku.

The timing of the product’s launch is notable, as it arrives amid the implementation of the E.U.’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) regulation, which is forcing Apple to open up the iPhone and the App Store to new completion. As a result, Apple initially blocked iPhone web apps (Progressive Web Apps, or PWAs) in the E.U., likely fearing developers would abandon its App Store, before reversing that decision under regulatory pressure.

For RevenueCat, however, the changes ahead for iOS — not to mention Apple’s refusal to cut its default 15%-30% commission rate — mean there are now more developers who are looking to the web to monetize their apps.

“It could be for progressive web apps or any kind of customer that wants to take payments outside of the App Store,” explains RevenueCat CEO Jacob Eiting, of the new web billing product. “It’s going to play within all the new [DMA] rules…it’s going to be a pretty significant product expansion for us,” he said.

The company says it moved in this direction because of the inbound interest from developers. Even if they didn’t have a web app, many developers wanted to shift their customers to the web to pay.

Though Stripe already enables this functionality, what developers were lacking was a system that’s specifically designed for consumer subscription apps. Now, even if developers are processing payments through Stripe or others, they’re getting their data and insights in the same format and within the same dashboard where they already manage their in-app purchase data. This makes it easier for them to focus on how their subscription apps are monetizing, overall, regardless of where the payment comes from — web or mobile.

Though Apple has historically not allowed app developers to steer customers to the web from inside their iOS apps, it has permitted steering from other channels — like the developer’s website or emails to customers. The E.U.’s DMA rules should also permit developers to steer customers to the web from inside their mobile apps, too.

With RevenueCat Billing, essentially a web SDK, developers can accept subscription payments from any website. It joins other recent product releases like Paywall, Targeting, and Experiments, which are all designed to help developers grow their revenue. Today, RevenueCat powers subscriptions in over 30,000 apps and handles over $2 billion in subscriptions annually, it says.

The new Series C from Adjacent (led by Nico Wittenborn — a Series A investor, now board member) totals $12 million. Other investors include Y Combinator, Index Ventures, Volo Ventures, and SaaStr Fund. Ahead of this round, RevenueCat had raised $56 million, bringing its total raise to $68+ million.

In addition to fueling its new products, the fundraise will help RevenueCat expand to new markets, including Japan and South Korea.

“Our main competitor is ‘cobbling together monetization technology yourself’,” said RevenueCat CTO and co-founder Miguel Carranza, in a statement about the fundraise and expansions. “In the U.S., we’ve done a good job at educating developers, product people, marketers, and CEOs on the challenges of building in-house. In many other regions, it’s unfortunately still the default for businesses to sink valuable resources into something that provides zero differentiation or value for that business’s end users. We’re investing in those regions by expanding our support for languages and local currencies later this year, deepening our relationships with local technology partners and agencies, as well as hiring in-market where possible,” he added.

Image Credits: RevenueCat

RevenueCat is not yet a profitable company, but Eiting says that profitability is always on the horizon. The company still has the money it raised in 2021 and now has over $40 million in the bank in addition to around $20 million in ARR. It has also halved its burn rate since last summer.

“There’s so much stuff we can build by deploying capital and doing it on a profitable basis would just slow us down right now. So while there’s access to capital, which isn’t always the case…the best thing for our customers and investors is to take more capital and deploy it faster,” he told TechCrunch.

“RevenueCat is too important to too many apps to risk the company driving towards a financial cliff. This may be counter to the prevailing narrative of how venture-backed companies should be built, but our investors are aligned with us and know that Miguel and I are leading the company to maximize the value for developers. Investors make more money when developers make more money,” the CEO added in a blog post. “To that end, we’re still aiming to take the company public in this decade,” he said.




Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Lawhive raises $12M to expand its legaltech AI platform for small firms | TechCrunch


UK-based legaltech company Lawhive, which offers an AI-based in-house ‘lawyer’ through a software-as-a-service platform targeted at small law firms, has raised £9.5 million ($11.9M) in a seed round to expand the reach of AI-driven services for ‘main street’ law firms.

To date, most legaltech startups that are deploying AI have concentrated on the big, juicy market of ‘Big Law’ — meaning large, either country-wide or global, law firms that are keenly pushing AI into their workflows. These include Harvey (US-based; raised $106M); Robin AI (UK-based; raised $43.4M); Spellbook (Canada-based; raised $32.4M). But there has been scant attention paid by startups to the thousands of ‘main street’ lawyers, which have far smaller budgets and are harder to monetize.

Lawhive targets its platform at small law firms or solo lawyers running their own shop. Lawyers can use its software to onboard and manage their own clients or be matched with consumers and small businesses through a marketplace feature.

The startup applies a variety of foundational AI models, and it’s own in-house model, to summarise documents and speed up the legal process for both lawyer and client across repetitive administrative tasks such as KYC/AML, client onboarding and document collection. Lawhive says its in-house AI lawyer, “Lawrence”, is built on top of its own large language model (LLM), which it claims has passed the Solicitors Qualifying Examination (SQE) — scoring 81% against a pass mark of 55%.

Speaking to TechCrunch over a call Pierre Proner, CEO and co-founder of Lawhive, said: “Pretty much all of the existing legaltech — AI companies like Harvey or Robin AI, or Spellbook — all go after the corporate market. That’s a very small number of big law firms in the US in the UK. We’re trying to solve the problem in the consumer legal space, which is totally different and a separate market, both in the UK and globally. It’s served at the moment by — in the UK — 10,000 small law firms.”

He said small firms have faced higher costs and a shrinking market: “They’ve got all of these high costs of staffing and paralegals and junior lawyers, trainees, etc, etc. And they only have one to three actual senior lawyers who are earning any money. So the model doesn’t work. There’s this huge exodus of like mid-career lawyers from the main-street/high street model, and a lot of them are going freelance self employed, and that’s where we’ve sort of seen a lot of traction through our platform of self-employed lawyers who use our AI lawyer.”

Although the UK consumer legal market is worth an estimated £25BN, like most legal markets, it’s groaning under the weight of its own costs. This means around 3.6 million people have an unmet legal need involving a dispute each year and around a million small businesses handle their legal issues on their own. So there’s a strong opportunity for automation to help the sector dial up productivity.

Proner added: “We do combine with foundational models from OpenAI and Anthropic, and as well as open source models. But it is our own model, which has been trained on the data that we’ve been able to gather from 1,000s of cases.”

The startup plans to use the seed round to enter other markets, per Proner: “We have our eyes on other markets yet to be publicly disclosed.”

It might be possible to infer where the planned market expansion will focus by looking at Lawhive’s lead investor: The seed round was led by GV, the venture capital investment arm of Alphabet, the US-based parent of Google. Also participating is London’s Episode 1 Ventures, following a £1.5M investment in April 2022.

In a statement, Vidu Shanmugarajah, partner at GV, said: “As a lawyer by training, I have experienced firsthand how needed technology-driven innovation is in the legal sector. Lawhive represents a transformative shift for both lawyers and consumers.”


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Security engineer jailed for 3 years for $12M crypto hacks | TechCrunch


Shakeeb Ahmed, a cybersecurity engineer convicted of stealing around $12 million in crypto, was sentenced on Friday to three years in prison.

In a press release, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York announced the sentence. Ahmed was accused of hacking into two cryptocurrency exchanges, and stealing around $12 million in crypto, according to prosecutors.

Adam Schwartz and Bradley Bondi, the lawyers representing Ahmed, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

When Ahmed was arrested last year, the authorities described him as “a senior security engineer for an international technology company.” His Linkedin profile said he previously worked at Amazon. But he wasn’t working there at the time of his arrest, an Amazon spokesperson told TechCrunch.

While the name of one of his victims was never disclosed, Ahmed reportedly hacked into Crema Finance, a Solana-based crypto exchange, in early July 2022.

Then, weeks later, he hacked into Nirvana Finance. Ahmed stole $9 million and $3.6 million in those two hacks, respectively. In the case of Nirvana Finance, the stolen funds “represented approximately all the funds possessed by Nirvana,” which led Nirvana Finance to shut down, according to the press release.

Ahmed pleaded guilty to having carried out both cyberattacks.

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After he hacked Crema, Ahmed contacted the company in an attempt to return the stolen funds, except for a fee of $1.5 million — a sort of unofficial finder’s fee — and a promise that Crema wouldn’t report the attack to the authorities. Crema declined, and Ahmed was eventually apprehended.

While this type of deal is unusual in the cybersecurity world, it has become normalized in the crypto world. These deals are often referred to as “white hatting,” even though it involves hacking a target and stealing a victim’s funds without their consent, which is more akin to what a “black hat” hacker would typically do. Ahmed’s case shows that while the crypto industry has accepted that this type of deals are sometimes the cost of doing business, law enforcement doesn’t see it the same way.

Apart from three years in prison, Ahmed was also sentenced to three years of supervised release, and ordered to forfeit $12.4 million “and a significant quantity of cryptocurrency and pay restitution to the Crypto Exchange and Nirvana in the amount of over $5 million,” according to the prosecutors’ press release.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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