FiscalNote Acquires Fireside And TimeBase
The acquired companies are:
Fireside, a Washington, DC-based provider of SaaS constituent management workflow tools leveraged by the US Congress and
TimeBase, an Australia-based company that provides legislative research and tracking tools that help organizations understand and keep up to date with Australian legislation.
Together, these acquisitions complement FiscalNote’s existing comprehensive set of solutions, which include policy monitoring, analysis and intelligence, and grassroots and advocacy tools.
Led by founder and CEO Tim Hwang, FiscalNote is an information services company focused on global policy and market intelligence, which combines AI technology, expert analysis, and legislative, regulatory, and geopolitical data.
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FiscalNote Announces Two Strategic Acquisitions
Company has acquired DC-based Fireside and Australian-based TimeBase to further expand industry leading solutions and expand global presence
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WASHINGTON, May 24, 2021 /PRNewswire/
FiscalNote, a leading technology provider of global policy and market intelligence, announces it has acquired two firms to further expand its capabilities and global presence. The acquired companies are:
Fireside, a Washington, DC-based provider of SaaS constituent management workflow tools leveraged by the US Congress and
TimeBase, an Australia-based company that provides legislative research and tracking tools that help organizations understand and keep up to date with Australian legislation.
Washington’s tech industry hasn’t been immune to the pandemic. Companies such as the IT giant DXC and the event-organizing platform Cvent cut jobs amid the slowdown. But some, including the hot cloud-computing company Appian, committed to hundreds of new hires.
Indeed, plenty of other good business news came from Washingtonian’s Tech Titans during the past year. Our 2021 winners who were selected through both reporting and an informal process of nominations from their peers managed to start up new and innovative companies, close on huge funding rounds, ink massive contracts, and announce initial public offerings.
Some of this year’s Tech Titans expanded their companies not only in spite of the pandemic but because of it. Michael Chasen, founder of the “edtech” firm Blackboard, leveraged the demand for at-home education to launch Class, a company that creates virtual classrooms using Zoom. Class has already raised more than $40 million. Blake Hall, founder of ID.me, wh
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
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Summary: Russia has long struggled to overcome its inability to retain talent for homegrown innovation and R&D. As a result, Russiaâs global activism leans heavily on tried-and-true tactics.
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Summary
How will the Kremlin’s tool kit evolve as emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning, and deepfake forgeries become more widespread?
Russia has long struggled to overcome the constraints imposed by the country’s chronic inability to retain talent in support of homegrown innovation and R&D. That reality may consign it to a follower role in the technological realm. Russia’s global activism continues to lean heavily on tried-and-true tactics and capabilities that are popping up more frequently in a variety of far-flung venues. The blatant and often sloppy nature of such efforts suggests the Russian leaders