âWeâre investing in about 10 bitcoin startups,â Plug and Playâs Scott Robinson revealed to an audience of investors at the recent Winter EXPO.
The crowd in attendance saw a batch of fintech (financial technology) startup pitches, 11 of which had a focus on bitcoin.
Robinson runs the bitcoin initiatives at Plug and Play Tech Center, a incubator and startup accelerator that has taken an interest in bitcoin startups as of late.
Plug and Playâs location in Sunnyvale, California is also home to the weekly Silicon Valley Bitcoin Meetup, which has 397 members and meets from 18:00 â 20:00 (local time) every Tuesday night. At the expo, Robinson called bitcoin âone of the most exciting things in the valleyâ.
Here is a rundown of the bitcoin startups that pitched for funding:
âWe offer a way to withdraw bitcoins from traditional ATMs,â said Brian Santos, CEO of Bitwal. Santos has designed a way to load and unload bitcoin from an ATM card.
Bitwalâs concept is to âsafely load digital currency in a re-loadable debit cardâ. According to Santos, it has a limit of $2,000 per day, from 1.5 million ATMs globally. The company plans to run as a service powered by the Ripple payments network.
Buying bitcoin is a âuser pain point, and people cannot find solutions in their own market,â said Taras Kuzin, CEO of Novelty Lab and former director at Western Union.
Novelty Lab plans to build a full operation exchange to provide the next generation of financial services for consumers and businesses. The company has already handled 5,400 transactions. It plans to use any funds raise to work towards obtaining money transmitter licenses in all 50 U.S. states.
âOnline bitcoin businesses are getting hacked everyday,â said Jakob Storm, one of the founders of CrowdCurity. The company crowdsources IT security for bitcoin companies. This involves building security reward programs with best practices and rules for testing.
CrowdCurity has already had more than 100 security professionals verify vulnerabilities. And half of its rewards have been paid out in bitcoin.âWe are 99designs meets IT security,â said Storm.
Co-founder Mugur Marculescu started his BitPagos pitch by telling the story of Sebastian, the companyâs Argentinean CEO, and citing that his countryâs currency âhas lost its value three separate timesâ. In some Latin American countries, there is a 30 â 50% loss of credit card processing payouts by merchants, he added.
BitPagos aims to solve this problem by accepting credit cards and paying out in bitcoin, protecting users from inflation and other problems. The company is focusing on hotels in the Latin American market to start.
Founder Travis Skweres says that his exchange CoinMKTÂ represents âhow the world trades cryptocurrencyâ. The company trades in USD and seven different decentralized currencies, including bitcoin, litecoin and namecoin.
Skweres described distributed money as the âmost ridiculous entrepreneurial and revolutionary opportunity.â The company has over 13,000 traders signed up, 15% of which use real money. CoinMKT is planning for international expansion in âlarge countries that donât have a bitcoin exchange,â according to Skweres.
John Light, who founded the Buttonwood open-air cryptocurrency trading exchange in downtown San Francisco, is the founder of PawnCoin. The idea driving the company is allowing people to have liquidity, while still holding onto bitcoin.
âWhat do you do when you need cash?â he asked. âBitcoin is an asset with upward potential, but investors need liquidity,â he said. PawnCoin plans to offer ID verification in less than 90 seconds and fast cash using multiple payment options â thus, customers can access the value of their bitcoin.
âBuying bitcoin is completely foreign versus any other financial product,â said Avish Bhama, CEO of Vaurum. Bhama has had previous experience in finance, and has hedged currency at Apple.
His company is building a system to provide the financial world access to bitcoin, as it doesnât currently have a great ability to get in and out of bitcoin investments.
âBitcoin is a financial product with a lack of access,â he told the audience. Vaurum has already closed its first few institutional customers.
âWe built a tiny supercomputer,â said Tony San, CEO of Raspberry Coins. The company was showcasing something called the âMicrominerâ, which San described as a âmobile supercomputer to mine bitcoinsâ.
The company has built its hardware to be more flexible than traditional computers, as its machine âruns at the speed of raw hardwareâ. The company is hoping to use its âpower of hardware, flexibility of softwareâ model for bitcoin mining, and other applications, like testing Sikorsky helicopters.
âYou download Gliph, attach an existing bitcoin wallet, itâs a simple experience,â said Rob Banagale, CEO of mobile app Gliph. The company wants to âhelp bring bitcoin to the worldâ through messaging, whereby users attach bitcoin to communications much like people do with files in email today.
The company is also exploring peer-to-peer marketplace concepts and identity products. One concept, âcloaked emailâ, is already a part of its app.
Editorâs note: Gliph iOS has since been forced to remove its bitcoin attachment feature by Apple. However, this feature is still available on Android devices.
âBitcoin is pseudonymous,â said Alain Meier, one of the founders of BlockScore. The companyâs product âhelps businesses make decisionsâ about customers by using the block chain to identify them.
BlockScore is also implementing an API that will help to verify customers through dozens of public records. It will charge $1.10 per ID verification and 40 cents for an additional question that will ensure transactions are being performed by a real person.
Jay Severson, Gambitâs founder, told the audience that he decided to start a bitcoin gaming company after noticing âSatoshiDice transactions take up a lot of block chainâ.
The company has an online real-time multiplayer gaming platform that allows people to play and earn bitcoin. Users can deposit bitcoin and make wagers on the site. Games like âRock Paper Scissorsâ and âBitnopolyâ are two of the seven games available on the platform right now.
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