Security startup snags funding in a tough market. But problems predate this recession as VC excitement for security has nosedived since 2000.
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Almost twice as many deals pulled as in 2007; China falls behind New York for first time in three years.
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Funding races ahead in the second quarter amid a slowdown in the United States, reports say. Where is U.S. funding going? American VCs come in nearly double on investments in China, injecting $583 million in 47 deals.
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Seattle, Los Angeles and Washington D.C., which have cleared the billion-dollar funding mark, are on the fast track, survey finds.
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VCs continue to pour money into a market that links the mobile phone and social networking sectors but the technology has not yet caught fire.
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Juice Wireless' funding comes as roughly $431 million has been shot into 92 mobile social-networking companies in the first three quarters of 2007. Time for a shakeout?
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Report shows Internet advertising hits record $16.8 billion.
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Forget Web 2.0 as VCs venture off the beaten path.
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It’s no dot-com boom, but corporate VC activity is steadily making solid gains.
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Second report confirms venture investments in second quarter reached four-year high.
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Shares tumble after New York panel asks for documents related to the infamous ‘hot coffee mod.’
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Traditional media is shifting to new content-delivery platforms, advertising strategies.
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Amsterdam-based exchange may merge with New York in $10.2-billion deal, but is still considering Deutsche Börse’s offer.
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Latest version lets Apple off the hook.
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Portal provider joins its former ad client Microsoft in partnering with big-bucks marketers.
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Red Herring magazine’s finance news briefs for the week of May 8, 2006.
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As the romance between marketing and the web blossoms, Microsoft tightens its embrace.
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New media advertising hits all-time high as traditional media pays the price.
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France's National Assembly votes for light penalties on downloading but is harsher on those who crack DRM software.
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Companies worried about government standards opt for European exchanges.
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