Who’s the new investor boosting Twitter’s valuation to around $1 billion?
It looks like East Coast money — New York-based Insight Venture Partners is the new firm backing the fast-growing microblogging network, according to TechCrunch. With more than $3 billion, Insight is a late-stage, private equity buyout fund, not one that would have come in during earlier rounds of financing.
The firm invested in Photobucket, which sold to News Corp. for $300 million in 2007. It was a controversial sale at the time, as some of the firm’s employees banked 15 times their original investment while Insight’s limited partners like pension funds and foundations made nothing, according to The Wall Street Journal. Full story...
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Popular video sharing platform YouTube announced today that it has added a new “Safety Mode” feature to its video watching experience.
PlaySpan scored a deal to provide virtual goods and global payment solutions for FooMojo’s FooPets.
(Editor’s note: Jeff Bussgang is a General Partner at Flybridge Capital Partners. This column originally appeared on his blog Seeing Both Sides.
Yell.com, the British online version of the Yellow Pages, has launched 18 new microsites powered by Daylife SmartSections, which VentureBeat wrote about in December.
Aspera has made its name transporting big digital files and videos from one professional creator to another since 2004.
There’s a new version of GiveWork, the application that lets iPhone owners perform simple tasks to help refugees, with new features that should make those tasks a little more varied and interesting.
E-cards have become an attractive way of sending cards versus traditional print cards. Through customization and animation features, e-cards are a quick and easy way to avoid the the Hallmark aisle and postage, but still let that someone know you care.
It’s always difficult for any big site to test and roll out new features. Many companies just test internally until they determine they have something good enough to roll out.
According to the Department of Labor, the majority of jobs in the near future will have a heavy focus on technology and having technical skills, including technical consulting and computer systems design.