Tuesday, May 29, 2007

First Step Towards Google Antivirus?


FYI - Google Acquires GreenBorde!


Google’s acquisition spree shows no signs of stopping: now the company has acquired Mountain View-based GreenBorder, which creates security software. It’s an interesting idea: the software creates a kind of sandbox for your web browsing, so that any viruses, spyware and trojans you pick up during your session are deleted as soon as the browser is closed. The name comes from the green border applied to your browser window when the service is active, letting you know that the whole session is being contained and no changes will be made to your PC by websites (even downloads are opened in a virtual environment).


In their own words, GreenBorder has created an “easy solution to virus, spyware, and trojan threats by isolating each Internet session from the rest of the PC and earlier Internet sessions. The beauty of the GreenBorder Pro software is it doesn’t need to be updated to guard against new virus signatures or new types of malware. It creates a secluded, virtual Internet session and when you are done, it flushes everything away, in your cache and in temporary files.” GreenBorder Pro costs $29.95, but will most certainly become free now that Google is in charge.


The question is: does this mark Google’s first step into the security and anti-virus game? It’s an area of web browsing that Google hasn’t yet ventured into, but the company’s relentless march would seem to put it in competition with virtually everyone

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Structuring Venture Capital and Other Investments in India

Many U.S. and other foreign investors are evaluating alternatives for structuring investments into software development, business process outsourcing, drug discovery and other tech and non-tech companies based in India.

Here's a whitepaper from Fenwik & West, a Cali based legal firm covering 2007 update to Structuring Venture Capital and Other Investments in India.

The primary structures for investing in India are:

1. Direct investment in an India company from outside India(usually through a Mauritius or a Cyprus subsidiary fortax reasons)
2. Investment in a U.S. company with a services fulfillmentsubsidiary in India
3. Investment in a Cayman Islands or Mauritius companywith a services fulfillment subsidiary in India
4. Direct investment in an India company from outsideIndia through a venture capital fund registered with theSecurities and Exchange Board of India.

The primary business considerations in determining how tostructure such an investment are:

1. Relative valuations in the U.S. and India capital marketsfor the type of investment in question, particularly aservices business;
2. Ease of IPO exit including any currency exchangerestrictions, the impact of Sarbanes-Oxley in the U.S. andoverseas company listing requirements in India;
3. Ease of acquisition by the likely set of acquirors as an exit-strategy
4. Investor “comfort” with the limitations on preferenceshares under the India Companies Act of 1956, asamended (the “Companies Act”)

It also covers the IPOs, Company act, Mauritius Financial Services Commission strategy, Cyprus and other key areas. Download the paper here

Friday, May 25, 2007

Nasscom to launch Venture Fund

Nasscom is set to launch a Venture Fund along with Hyderabad-based ICICI Knowledge Park, an arm of the ICICI bank.

Rajdeep Sehrawat, vice president of Nasscom, said the new Venture Fund will be under the trade body but will run as a professional Venture Fund.

“We have earmarked Rs 100 crore ($22million)to fund IT start-ups in India, which are involved in IP-creation. These companies could be anyone who is working on automotive electronics, wireless and broadband, life sciences, medical devices and the like,”
he informed.

Stating that the venture fund will be in place by October this year, Sehrawat said the fund will be looking at disbursing seed capital or angel funding, which other venture capital firms hesitate to enter.

“We will be financing early start-ups, in their ideation stage, as this is where money is a problem. When the idea takes the prototype stage, then other VCs will be interested and we will be exiting,”
he said.

“We have not limited on the number of projects, but have earmarked Rs 100 crores. Our vision for the Venture Fund will be on long-term, high-risk categories,”
he added.

via: CIOL

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Launching pad for new start-ups?

Like many venture capital firms, the people at General Catalyst Partners don’t like to talk about themselves - at least not publicly.

The firm’s partners prefer to keep the attention on the businesses they back.

But General Catalyst in Harvard Square is quickly becoming a top player in the world of new media and marketing. Only seven years old, the firm has invested in some of the most-talked-about start-ups to come out of the Boston area.

From online video distributor Brightcove to word-of-mouth marketing agency BzzAgent, from Jeff Taylor’s Eons - a baby boomer social networking site - to online travel company Kayak.com, General Catalyst has played a role in some of the more intriguing companies to launch in recent years.

General Catalyst was one of the top three venture capital firms investing in Web 2.0 companies last year based on the number of deals it made, said Valerie Foo, research manager at Dow Jones VentureOne, which tracks venture capital firms. That would put General Catalyst at the top of the Web 2.0 heap in the Northeast.

Many of the companies General Catalyst have backed have been born out of the firm’s own office. A recently launched company that provides text-based music reviews and news to cell phones, 80108 Media, used office space at General Catalyst. But not everyone has come from the inside.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

IBM VC group eyes India

IBM’S venture capital group which works with venture capital firms to build an ecosystem of start-up partners for developing innovative solutions and products, is now eyeing India as a potential geography. The group is in the process of identifying four-five VC firms in the country for the programme.

“Innovation in India is growing at a rapid pace, in fact faster than how it was in China when we went there a couple of years ago. So we are looking to tie up with a few VC firms including a couple of local VC players to help us identify innovative companies and technology,’’
IBM Venture Capital Group MD Claudia Fan Munce told ET. She was speaking on the sidelines of the company’s first India Innovation Forum held on Wednesday in Bangalore.

read the Economic Times news here

Reliance Entertainment’s Social Networking Portal Big Adda Goes Live


Reliance Entertainment’s social networking portal "Big Adda” has gone live. The company ran a series of polls over the past few months, ever since ContentSutra broke the story of it’s impending launch, asking users to select logos and templates.

On the face of it, the site has addas (forums), photos, videos and blogs. Nothing spectacular so far. Looks like they didn’t go with my choice of logo. (Bah!) Update: It’s a closed beta, by invitation only, I’m told.

However, there is an overview available here. More importantly, do take a look at the terms and conditions, particularly the parts in bold, dealing with user generated content. An excerpt:

You are solely responsible for the content...that you post on or through the BigAdda Website, and any material or information that you transmit to other Members and for your interactions with other Users...

BigAdda makes no warranties, express or implied, as to the Content or to the accuracy and reliability of the Content or any material or information that you transmit to other Members.
Orkut, MingleBox, DesiMartini, Fropper, now BigAdda - Ohhh - Please No! btw Myspace entered china last week, targeting India soon - Please!!!!

Monday, May 07, 2007

Report On Opportunities In Indian Electronics Manufacturing

If you are an investor or if you are a potential entrepreneur looking to start up in electronic manufacturing, the UK-based consulting firm Plan B Manufacturing has released a free 83-page report titled - "Indian Electronics Manufacturing: Where are the startup opportunities?"

Download here (3MB)

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Social Networking Site Minglebox Receives $7 Million In Funding Fron Sequoia Capital

Indian social networking site Minglebox has received $7 million in funding from Sequoia Capital India. Minglebox was started by three IIT Delhi alumni - Kavita Iyer, Sanjay Aggarwal and Sushma Abburi, who have previously worked in companies like Yahoo, i2, ICICI, Wipro, HLL and Infosys. R.Ramaraj, ex-CEO and co-founder of Sify has joined the board of Minglebox.

The company has apparently adopted a different approach to populating its social network - they’ve focused on creating communities for colleges and trying to emulate a college hangout online, which is one of the things people use Orkut (yeah, we keep going back to Orkut, don’t we?) for.

Minglebox has a bunch of other usual stuff: blogs, photos and videos. Most videos are from YouTube, and there is (again) some copyrighted Bollywood content embedded from YouTube...I wonder who’s liable in this case - the user who uploads; YouTube, which publishes and facilitates sharing; or Minglebox, where the video is embedded...that’s a problem that many social networks with video content are facing today.