Stytch, a San Francisco, CA-based passwordless authentication company, raised $30m in Series A funding.
The round was led by Thrive Capital with participation from Coatue Management and existing investors Benchmark and Index Ventures. In conjunction with the funding, Thrive Capital’s Gaurav Ahuja will join Benchmark’s Chetan Puttagunta on Stytch’s board of directors.
The company intends to use the funds to roll out more authentication options, including mobile biometrics, WebAuthn, OAuth logins, QR codes, and push notification login, to launch additional user infrastructure features to continue to onboard and engage users, and to build out session management and advanced fraud detection solutions.
Ex-Plaid employees raise $30M for Stytch, an API-first passwordless authentication platform – TechCrunch
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Working remotely during COVID-19 leads to big tax hit for Canadian couple, others may face similar bill
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Enterprise Project Optimisation PPM Consulting Market Leader BPM Vision Expands Footprint in Asia with New Office in Malaysia
Mar 04 2021
MELBOURNE, Australia, March 4, 2021 /PRNewswire/ BPM Vision continues to expand its footprint in the Asia Pacific region with the announcement of its new office in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, BPM Vision has existing offices in Singapore, Philippines, Hong Kong and now Malaysia.
Since its inception in 2008, BPM Vision has been responsible for the success of dozens of HP PPM/ Micro Focus PPM implementations across the Asia Pacific region in a wide range of industries across the commercial and government sectors, including Financial Services, Retail, Energy, Education and Infrastructure delivering successful outcomes to recognised global logos.
Minors stole cash to keep on betting
Minors stole cash to keep on betting
ByArchana MoreArchana More / Updated: Feb 20, 2021, 06:00 IST
Investigation into the
cricket betting and extortion case revealed that the arrested gang members of the syndicate have been running the racket for last five years in the city. It was also revealed that the minor youths who lost huge money in the betting had stolen cash from their own houses to fulfill the demands of the gang, said officers of crime branch (unit 4), which has apparently received such complaints.
On February 11, the crime branch busted a racket in the city wherein