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Indonesia’s IDN Media foray into e-sports by acquiring GGWP.ID

GGWP.ID is a multi-platform e-sports company which was created with a vision to make ‘e-sports for everyone’

IDN Media

IDN Media, a multi-platform media company for “millennials and Gen Z in Indonesia”, has announced the acquisition of GGWP.ID to mark its entry into the fast-growing e-sports industry.

The company — which also operates several other business units including IDN Times, Popbela.com, Popmama.com, Yummy, IDN Creative, IDN Event, and IDN Creator Network — aims to make GGWP.ID the  ‘ESPN’ of e-sports in Indonesia. It also wants to build awareness and exposure of the opportunities that e-sports can bring to society, including to e-sports players, enthusiasts, content creators, and brands.

As per the deal, Founder Ricky Setiawan will continue to be the CEO of GGWP.ID.

Winston Utomo, Founder & CEO of IDN Media, said: “We believe that the e-sports phenomenon has just begun. With GGWP.ID, we envision to create the biggest and most impactful e-sports company in the region for Millennials and Gen Z.”

Also Read: Sources say Tokopedia is involved in a funding round for Sayurbox

GGWP.ID is a multi-platform e-sports company which was created with a vision to make ‘e-sports for everyone’.  It has four main business units — eSports Media (a multi-platform media for e-sports enthusiasts), eSports Tournament Platform (which allows users to create and organise tournaments by themselves instantly), eSports Team (professional e-sports team that competes in popular games), and eSports Creative (a multi-platform digital agency focusing on brand storytelling, content creation, and online activation).

In addition, GGWP.ID also hosts Game Prime, a gaming event in Indonesia, together with BEKRAF, Republik Indonesia/IACE (Indonesian Agency for Creative Economy) and AGI (Asosiasi Game Indonesia), an Indonesian game association.

According to Setiawan said: “As a leading media company for millennials and Gen Z in Indonesia, IDN Media can help us reach more audience and accelerate our vision to make eSports available for everyone.”

Early this year, IDN Media raised a Series C funding round led by EV Growth. EV Growth is a joint venture of East Ventures, Sinar Mas, and Yahoo! Japan.

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Meet the 3 startups graduating from Vietnam-based VIISA Accelerator’s fifth batch

The startups have received a seed funding, and stand to get a follow-on funding of up to US$200K when they secure a new round from other investors

Vietnam-based VIISA Accelerator has announced the graduation of three startups graduating from the fifth batch of its 4-month accelerator programme with the Investment Day.

The three startups have received a seed funding from the accelerator and benefited from its partners, such as Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Payoo, and the MoonLab co-working space.

The promising startups also stand to get a follow-on funding of up to US$200,000 from VIISA when they secure a new round of funding from other investors.

Also Read: Vietnam stars in January as e27 data tracks US$1.5B in deals

Below is a sneak-peek into the five ventures:

VDES

VIDES is a one-stop-shop marketplace that connects event venues and event suppliers to customers using Big Data, Machine Learning, and Virtual Reality. The company claims customers are able to save 80 per cent time and 30 per cent cost in all booking processes and receive the best price guarantee.

SaveMoney

SaveMoney is a full-service insurance provider. It claims to offer a scalable digital insurance platform with an integrated B2C advisory process using Big data, giving the possibility to design, implement and roll-out existing and new insurance services within three months.

Loglag

Loglag provides a truck and container booking platform with Big Data, AI techniques applied. By leveraging mobile connectivity, Loglag connects drivers and fleet owners to cargos and customers in order to make the logistics and transportation industry in Vietnam more accessible.

Also Read: Indonesia’s IDN Media foray into e-sports by acquiring GGWP.ID

Hieu Vo, CFO at VIISA, said: “I am proud of what these amazing founders have overcome and developed throughout the program. In order to make these changes happen, startups in batch 5 have actively harnessed and created large, scalable networks of users and resources that can be accessed on-demand. There are real products, real technologies that generated more than 3,000 transactions within three months.

On the other hand, the network effects these startups built touches more than 500,000 people in Vietnam. With their solution and product, the startups are helping customers in reducing time and transaction costs, increase revenue by enabling externalized innovation.”

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How Taiwan’s blockchain industry is powering through the downturn

Here’s a high-level view of Taiwan’s blockchain industry

In the first half of 2019, Taiwan’s blockchain industry shook off last year’s steep decline in crypto prices and proceeded to show positive developments. These past few months saw Taiwan’s financial authority, the Financial Supervisory Committee (FSC), release the first draft of security token offering (STO) regulations, while also pledging more resources to further incubate the country’s blockchain capabilities.

Although there weren’t as many new ventures created compared to 2017 and 2018, existing players in Taiwan’s blockchain industry have been resilient. Since we released our first blockchain ecosystem snapshot 6 months ago, only 8 organizations have ceased operations and were taken off the chart.

At the same time, leaders like MaiCoin, BitoEX, and OwlTing have begun diversifying their service offerings and developing new solutions to fast-track user adoption. Meanwhile, the small handful of new additions, including KrytpoGO and Bincentive, are seemingly more attuned to industry pain points, at least compared to their peers.

Proliferation of exchanges

Unsurprisingly, exchanges continue to serve as the most pervasive application serving the blockchain/crypto space. In addition to becoming the first operator in Taiwan to apply for the STO sandbox, MaiCoin Group, which operates MAX exchange, is trying to reshape Taiwan’s capital markets by opening up the country’s first physical storefront to process KYC in person.

Through face-to-face interaction, the group hopes to build up trust and credibility in an industry that’s been ripe with scams, hacks, and privacy breaches.

At the same time, some exchange operators are now leveraging their technical acumen to branch into infrastructure plays. Local exchange BitoEX is now building a blockchain-based system to track and store data relating to any SME’s supply chain finances.

Also Read: Blockchain startup BlockPunk launches tokenised anime film and NFC-enabled art print

Given the immutability of distributed ledger technology, banks can comfortably use the information to facilitate commercial loans or appraise assets without the fear of compromised data. The data can also aid regulators in evaluating companies that want to eventually tokenize their assets and conduct an STO.

These past six months have also seen new exchanges emerge. ACE Exchange, for example, has been attracting its initial crop of users through the allure of initial exchange offerings (IEO), an alternative financing vehicle in which the exchange itself vets, facilitates, and lists a project’s token offering.

Among the many exchanges out there, however, none captured the attention of industry stakeholders more than COBINHOOD. In an almost Netflix drama-like fashion, the homegrown, zero-fee cryptocurrency exchange experienced ongoing internal power struggles and shareholder disputes that eventually led the founder Popo Chen to suspend the local entity and let go all of its staff. COBINHOOD and the affiliated protocol initiative DEXON are now on lockdown while all technical and legal controversies are resolved.

Responding to market demands

Although the number of new projects may have declined compared to previous years, blockchain solutions have certainly become much more tailored to immediate market needs.

For example, since cryptocurrency service providers such as exchanges and wallets have not been subject to strict supervision, the blockchain industry generally lacks infrastructure related to regulatory compliance. KryptoGO is a newly established regtech startup that developed a solution to help banks and regulatory agencies analyze on-chain data to help automate risk control.

Bincentive, on the other hand, fully believes in the future of cryptocurrencies and aims to help traditional investors get a piece of the action. By combining AI, social trading, and smart contracts, the startup has developed a Smart Mirror Trading Platform that essentially allows clients to not only follow, but mirror the trades of vetted crypto traders, who then earn a share of the profits.

Through this platform, Bincentive hopes to bridge digital currencies with traditional financial assets, helping the former to eventually become a recognized alternative investment class in and of itself.

Additionally, OwlTing—an early mover in Taiwan’s startup landscape—officially launched OwlTing Blockchain Services (OBS), a collective offering of blockchain solutions incorporating 6 years of experimentation spanning multiple industries including food traceability, hotel management, travel, and anti-counterfeiting. Last year, the company raised US$10 million from Japanese venture capital firm SBI.

Regulations get more defined

This map was produced by AppWorks in conjunction with local blockchain media Blocktempo. Apart from conducting primary research, we used information from our own respective networks, communities, and investment partners, and pored through local and international news. The map will be updated every half year to adequately capture the sheer pace at which the industry is evolving.

This past June, the FSC released a draft of what may be the “world’s first” set of STO regulations. Under the new provisions, startups can be approved for STOs as early as October this year, but are still held to a relatively short leash.

Those fundraising via security tokens are capped at NT$30 million (~US$1 million). Furthermore, only accredited investors are allowed to invest, with a limit of NT$300,000 (~US$10,000) in any single project. Any startup looking to raise in excess of the set threshold must apply to the regulatory sandbox, just as MaiCoin has.

As applications of cryptocurrencies have started to expand beyond just trading, Taiwanese decision makers will also look to broaden the scope of KYC/AML regulations in the second half of 2019. Moving forward, any projects working in the realm of digital payments and remittances will likely have to apply for a special license in order to operate.

Despite all the cautionary measures, the government has taken several forthright steps to incorporate blockchain into Taiwan’s future. At the opening of the Asia Blockchain Summit in July, Minister of the National Development Council (NDC) Chen Mei-ling announced the agency’s plans to form a blockchain alliance with representatives from industry, academia, and relevant government bodies. The initiative hopes to accelerate the development of Taiwan’s blockchain industry, including everything from strengthening R&D to cultivating talent to fostering global partnerships.

Also Read: 5 Asia-based startups that are making blockchain part of everyday life

The National Development Fund—Taiwan’s sovereign wealth fund—has also reportedly begun investing in blockchain ventures, XREX (an AppWorks portfolio) being the most recent case.

At the same time, other public departments in Taiwan are also beginning to experiment with distributed ledger technology. For example, the Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau hopes to leverage the immutable nature of the blockchains to optimize the administrative process of issuing national IDs.

Forward-looking optimism

Overall, excitement is resurging within Taiwan’s blockchain industry. Crypto prices are well on their road to recovery, with Bitcoin having now almost topped US$13,000.

The second annual Asia Blockchain Summit in Taipei attracted over 4,000 attendees from around the world and 100 speakers, including Binance’s CZ, TRON’s Justin Sun, and Bitmex’s Arthur Hayes. And two of the largest companies in the world—Facebook and JPMorgan Chase—launched their own blockchain projects, Libra and JPMCoin, surely a positive endorsement by anyone’s standards.

For AppWorks Accelerator, we’ve now facilitated two batches of startups exclusively focusing on blockchain / AI, collectively amounting to 65 startups, 29 of which were working on blockchain/crypto/dapp related projects.

Also Read: Here’s how blockchain can transform the compute resource economy

Entertainment, whether it’s gaming or gambling, seems to have represented the majority of projects that blockchain founders tend to work on, truly speaking to what exactly early adopters are willing to pay for at this stage of the industry—not so unlike the early days of the internet.

Moreover, while Ethereum has traditionally occupied the limelight, we see more and more public chains such as EOS or TRON becoming popular, each offering their own unique value proposition—a trend we expect to continue moving forward.

Disclosure: AppWorks is a fully independent venture capital fund/startup accelerator and is not currently affiliated with any of the companies or organizations mentioned in the article, with the slight exception of BitoEX, which previously went through our equity-free accelerator, and XREX, which we’ve invested in.

Editor’s note: e27 publishes relevant guest contributions from the community. Share your honest opinions and expert knowledge by submitting your content here.

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Tech recruitment platform Glints eyes Vietnam, Hong Kong expansion with US$6.8M funding

Glints aims to make traditional recruiting more effective by automating certain processes such as candidate sourcing, matching and follow-ups

Glints, a tech-enabled recruitment and career development platform in Southeast Asia, has secured US$6.8 million in an oversubscribed Series B funding round led by Monk’s Hill Ventures.

Other investors include Hong Kong-based MindWorks Ventures and existing investors Fresco Capital and Wavemaker Partners, the Singapore-based startup said in a statement.

The money will be used to expand into Vietnam and Hong Kong, in addition to growing its product and engineering teams.

Launched in 2015, Glints combines the skills of experienced recruiters and technology by automating certain recruitment processes, such as candidate sourcing, matching and follow-ups. Recruiters will be able to match strong graduates with one of Glints’s employers for a good job opportunity.

The firm says it takes an end-to-end approach for potential candidates that goes beyond just sourcing profiles to actually developing candidate supply through training programs such as Glints Academy. The Academy is a coding bootcamp that trains young talent in Indonesia to become developers.

Also Read: Sources say Tokopedia is involved in a funding round for Sayurbox

The company’s clients include Go-Jek, FWD Insurance and UOB Bank. Glints claims its clients on an average make successful hires in 28 days compared to industry standards of 40-50 days, and with a lower cost.

Oswald Yeo, CEO and Co-founder of Glints, said: “We believe we have found the right growth model to solve the challenge of finding the best talent that is targeted, cost and time efficient for both clients and candidates. Employers have a tough time finding the right candidates on job portals and waste much time filtering through irrelevant applications. Traditional headhunters, while more effective, are too expensive for many employers, especially when they are hiring for junior to mid-level positions, which is especially common in Southeast Asia given its young workforce.”

Peng T. Ong, Managing Partner of Monk’s Hill Ventures, commented: “Employers are struggling to fill their vacancies with a shortage of skilled talent worldwide, and it is no exception in Southeast Asia. Glints has thought through the entire journey of someone who is looking for work or talent and has developed an end-to-end tech solution that meets the needs of both candidates and companies in Asia. The traction and strong growth we’ve seen is very exciting, which is why we decided to partner with Glints and lead the investment of their Series B round.”

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Today’s top tech news, July 15: Bitcoin drops, Unicorn India Ventures announces 2nd equity fund

In addition to Bitcoin and Unicorn India Ventures, we also have updates from Beowulf and Moneythor

bitcoin_news_drop

Bitcoin drops more than 10 per cent as cryptocurrency scrutiny continues – Reuters

Bitcoin slumped more than 10 per cent over the weekend as fears of cryptocurrency crackdown grew, Reuters reported.

Bitcoin fell 11.1 per cent from Friday to US$9,855 early on Monday. This figure is its lowest since July 2.

The drop is related to mounting scrutiny against Facebook’s upcoming Libra coin, which has been raising concerns from politicians and financial regulators across the world.

The concerns against the cryptocurrency range from consumer protection and privacy to potential systemic risks, given Facebook’s global reach.

Unicorn India Ventures launches second equity fund – Press Release

Mumbai-based venture capital fund Unicorn India Ventures announced the launch of its second equity fund for early stage startups.

The fund size is INR400 crore (US$58 million) and the first close is expected at INR150 crore (US$21 million) by the end-of-year.

It will look to invest in Pre-Series A and Series A funding rounds in sectors such as B2B, SaaS, fintech, healthtech, robotics, gaming, and digital content.

Also Read: eToro aims to make buying Bitcoin as easy as buying an Apple share

Mars Blockchain, Consentium invest in Beowulf – Deal Street Asia

Singapore-developed chat app Consentium and price-stable digital currency Mars Blockchain announced a seven-digit US Dollar investment into Beowulf, a decentralised cloud network for telecommunications, Deal Street Asia reported.

Beowulf is a platform that enables businesses to provide communication features without the typical barriers associated with call centres.

The company recently announced the launch of QUICKOM, a customisable and private QR code-based call service.

Moneythor opens office in Japan – Press Release

Digital banking solutions provider Moneythor today announced the opening of its newest office in Tokyo, Japan.

The Japanese subsidiary has been opened in response to rising needs in the country for digital banking
solutions.

“The Japanese market is going through a major stage of disruption and its renewed focus on digital banking makes it a very exciting market for us. By expanding our global footprint into Japan, we are confident that we can support financial institutions as they move towards digital banking by providing a simple and cost-effective banking channel that will drive online customer engagement,” said Moneythor CEO & Co-Founder Olivier Berthier in a press statement.

The company is headquartered in Singapore and has offices in Paris and London.

Image Credit: Gratisography

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