The Greenville startup is a B2B identity infrastructure company that helps customers, primarily live event organizers and experience creators, transparently aggregate, manage and store customer identity information. The money will be used to help the company, founded by Harold Hughes, fund further development and expand its workforce.
“Their founder had an idea, took advantage of technological advances, and created a needed service in the events industry,” said Lee MacIlwinen, SCRA investment manager in a news release. “Bandwagon’s flagship product,
Aura, has been used internationally to manage and store customer information, in a transparent and secure manner.”
Bandwagon’s platform uses permission-only blockchain, encryption and multi-party computing to help customers partner with other stakeholders to safely and securely gather large groups, both in-person and virtually.
SC Launch Inc invests in event data company
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Atlanta Inno - New Atlanta startup Knac is using software to solve tech s diversity problem
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Google for Startups opens applications for $2 Million European fund for Black founded tech startups 02 March 2021
Source: Google Google for Startups announces applications are now open for $2million (approximately £1.5million) Black Founders Fund for Black-led tech startups across Europe. With less than 0.25 percent of venture capital (VC) funding going to Black-led startups in the UK, and only 38 Black founders receiving venture capital funding in the last 10 years, Black founders are disproportionately lacking access to the networks and capital needed to grow their businesses.
Music Tech Works launches a database to help identify rights holders for syncs
UPDATED: Being able to accurately find the controlling publisher and label information of a music track destined for syncing has been an issue plaguing the music industry for far too long – an issue which Jarett Hines and Bryson Nobeles of Music Tech Works may have solved.
Guest post by
Jarett Hines and
Bryson Nobles, co-founders of
Music Tech Works, believe they have solved one of the critical problems facing synchronisation licensing: finding the controlling publisher and label information of music tracks to be used for syncs.
They have set up